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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Quantitative Analysis of Breast Cancer Tissue Microarrays Shows High Cox-2 Expression Is Associated with Poor Outcome

, B.S., , M.D., Ph.D., , M.D., , M.D., Ph.D. & , M.D.
Pages 19-26 | Published online: 11 Jun 2009
 

Abstract

Epidemiologic and preclinical studies suggest that cyclooxygenase-2 (Cox-2) may promote tumor growth and spread by affecting angiogenesis and apoptosis in breast cancer. Using a tissue microarray (TMA), we analyzed the expression and subcellular localization of Cox-2 by AQUA and X-tile, our algorithms for quantitative analysis of protein expression and determination of optimal cutpoints. Our TMA consisted of 669 Stage I–III primary breast cancers. The total tumor and subcellular expression of Cox-2 were then correlated with clinicopathologic factors and with survival. Cox-2 expression appeared higher in malignant than in benign tissue and was predominantly membrane/cytoplasmic (i.e. non-nuclear). X-tile determines an optimum cutpoint on a training set then uses this cutpoint on a validation set. This cutpoint was 19.3 (top 44 percent defined as positive) with high nonnuclear Cox-2 expressers having significantly worse survival. Cox-2 expression also was inversely associated with estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR), and directly associated with nuclear grade. Multivariate analysis showed that Cox-2 remained a significant prognostic factor for survival independent of tumor size, nodal status, ER, Her2/neu, and grade. In summary, Cox-2 is overexpressed in breast neoplasms, is associated with other markers of poor prognosis, and is significantly associated with worse survival independent of known prognostic factors. Furthermore, AQUA and X-tile analysis suggest an optimal cutpoint that may be helpful in future investigations of Cox-2 and specifically, in studies looking at its expression as a predictive biomarker in clinical trials of Cox-2 inhibitors in breast cancer.

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