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Diversity index as a novel prognostic factor in breast cancer
Author(s) -
Yul Ri Chung,
Hyun Jeong Kim,
Young A Kim,
Mee Soo Chang,
Kihwan Hwang,
So Yeon Park
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
oncotarget
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.373
H-Index - 127
ISSN - 1949-2553
DOI - 10.18632/oncotarget.21371
Subject(s) - lymphovascular invasion , breast cancer , oncology , cancer , copy number variation , diversity index , genetic heterogeneity , medicine , biology , gene , metastasis , genetics , phenotype , paleontology , genome , species richness
Intratumoral genetic heterogeneity leads to tumor progression and therapeutic resistance. However, due to the difficulty associated with its assessment, the use of this heterogeneity as a prognostic or predictive marker remains limited. To investigate the significance of the Shannon diversity index of gene copy number variation as a tool for measuring genetic heterogeneity in breast cancer, we performed fluorescence in situ hybridization of c-MYC in two sets of invasive breast cancer samples and correlated the Shannon index of c -MYC copy number variation with clinicopathologic features and patient survival. The Shannon index was correlated with average c-MYC copy number and was higher in tumors in which c-MYC was amplified and in those with c-MYC genetic or regional heterogeneity. A high Shannon index was associated with adverse pathologic features including high histologic grade, lymphovascular invasion, p53 overexpression, high Ki-67 proliferation index and negative hormone receptor status. It was also associated with poor disease-free survival in the whole group, in a subgroup excluding c-MYC- amplified cases, and in the hormone receptor-positive subgroup of both a test and a validation set. A high Shannon index for FGFR1 gene copy number variation was also an independent adverse prognostic factor. Our findings suggest that the Shannon diversity index is a measure of intratumoral heterogeneity and can be used as a prognostic factor in breast cancer.

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