Poor Outcome in Postpartum Breast Cancer Patients Is Associated with Distinct Molecular and Immunologic Features
Hanne Lefrère (Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)
Kat S. Moore (Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis)
Giuseppe Floris (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, University Hospital Leuven)
J. Sanders (Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis)
Iris M. Seignette (Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis)
T Bismeijer (Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis)
Dennis Peters (Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis)
Annegien Broeks (Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Ziekenhuis)
Lodewyk .F.A. Wessels (TU Delft - Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics, Nederlands Kanker Instituut - Antoni van Leeuwenhoek ziekenhuis)
G.B. More authors (External organisation)
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Abstract
PURPOSE: Patients with postpartum breast cancer diagnosed after cessation of breastfeeding (postweaning, PP-BCPW) have a particularly poor prognosis compared with patients diagnosed during lactation (PP-BCDL), or to pregnant (Pr-BC) and nulliparous (NP-BC) patients, regardless of standard prognostic characteristics. Animal studies point to a role of the involution process in stimulation of tumor growth in the mammary gland. However, in women, the molecular mechanisms that underlie this poor prognosis of patients with PP-BCPW remain vastly underexplored, due to of lack of adequate patient numbers and outcome data. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We explored whether distinct prognostic features, common to all breast cancer molecular subtypes, exist in postpartum tumor tissue. Using detailed breastfeeding data, we delineated the postweaning period in PP-BC as a surrogate for mammary gland involution and performed whole transcriptome sequencing, immunohistochemical, and (multiplex) immunofluorescent analyses on tumor tissue of patients with PP-BCPW, PP-BCDL, Pr-BC, and NP-BC. RESULTS: We found that patients with PP-BCPW having a low expression level of an immunoglobulin gene signature, but high infiltration of plasma B cells, have an increased risk for metastasis and death. Although PP-BCPW tumor tissue was also characterized by an increase in CD8+ cytotoxic T cells and reduced distance among these cell types, these parameters were not associated with differential clinical outcomes among groups. CONCLUSIONS: These data point to the importance of plasma B cells in the postweaning mammary tumor microenvironment regarding the poor prognosis of PP-BCPW patients. Future prospective and in-depth research needs to further explore the role of B-cell immunobiology in this specific group of young patients with breast cancer.