Bone marrow micrometastases in breast cancer patients.

Breast Cancer Res Treat

Department of Medical Oncology, University of Verona, Italy.

Published: November 1999

The presence of epithelial cells in bone marrow may be a prognostic factor in breast cancer, and so we evaluated their evolution in treated and untreated patients. A first bone marrow aspirate was obtained from 125 stage I/II breast cancer patients at diagnosis and repeated every 6-8 months; the samples were processed for leukocyte separation, used to prepare cytospin slides, stained with a pool of monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) recognising epithelial antigens, and immunocytochemically processed. The median follow-up was 48 months (range 15-82); 23 patients relapsed, and 14 died. MoAb positive cells were observed in 31.2% of first, 24.3% of second, and 27.8% of third aspirates. In 68/100 pairs of successive aspirates, bone marrow status remained unchanged; in 20 it became negative, and in 12 positive (not statistically significant even after adjusting for adjuvant therapy). An analysis based on Mantel and Byar's approach to time-dependent covariates using all 225 aspirates found no statistically significant prognostic difference between the patients with negative and positive bone marrow. Bone marrow status changed over time in about 1/3 of the patients; adjuvant therapy did not affect the probability of its becoming negative or positive. No significant association was found between bone marrow evolution and relapse or death, but the relatively high probability of a change in status over time cannot exclude the possibility that a positive aspirate during the course of breast cancer may be a negative prognostic factor.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/a:1006336100142DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

bone marrow
28
breast cancer
16
negative positive
12
cancer patients
8
prognostic factor
8
marrow status
8
adjuvant therapy
8
bone
7
patients
6
marrow
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!