Background: Breast cancer is the most common malignant tumor in women worldwide, and disproportionately affects Sub-Saharan Africa compared to high income countries. The global disease burden is growing, with Sub-Saharan Africa reporting majority of the cases. In Kenya, breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer, with an annual incidence of 7,243 new cases in 2022, representing 25.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Women of African descent have the highest breast cancer mortality in the United States and are more likely than women from other population groups to develop an aggressive disease. It remains uncertain to what extent breast cancer in Africa is reminiscent of breast cancer in African American or European American patients. Here, we performed whole-exome sequencing of genomic DNA from 191 breast tumor and non-cancerous adjacent tissue pairs obtained from 97 African American, 69 European American, 2 Asian American, and 23 Kenyan patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Characterization of the breast cancer (BC) immune response may provide information for a point of intervention, such as application of immunotherapeutic treatments. In this study, we sought to recover and characterize the adaptive immune receptor (IR) recombination reads from genomics files representing Kenyan patients, to better understand the immune response specifically related to those patients.
Methods: We used a previously applied algorithm and software to obtain productive IR recombination reads from cancer and adjacent normal tissue samples representing 22 Kenyan BC patients.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol
July 2023
Purpose: A very large and still expanding collection of adaptive immune receptor (IR) recombination reads, representing many diseases, is becoming available for downstream analyses. Among the most productive approaches has been to establish risk stratification parameters via the chemical features of the IR complementarity determining region-3 (CDR3) amino acid (AA) sequences, particularly for large datasets where clinical information is available. Because the IR CDR3 AA sequences often play a large role in antigen binding, the chemistry of these AAs has the likelihood of representing a disease-related fingerprint as well as providing pre-screening information for candidate antigens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Few studies have investigated risk factor heterogeneity by molecular subtypes in indigenous African populations where prevalence of traditional breast cancer (BC) risk factors, genetic background, and environmental exposures show marked differences compared to European ancestry populations.
Methods: We conducted a case-only analysis of 838 pathologically confirmed BC cases recruited from 5 groups of public, faith-based, and private institutions across Kenya between March 2012 to May 2015. Centralized pathology review and immunohistochemistry (IHC) for key markers (ER, PR, HER2, EGFR, CK5-6, and Ki67) was performed to define subtypes.