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Non-Metastatic Axillary Lymph Nodes Have Distinct Morphology and Immunophenotype in Obese Breast Cancer patients at Risk for Metastasis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Obese breast cancer patients have worse outcomes compared to normal weight women, including significantly higher rates of axillary nodal metastasis.
  • Recent studies suggest a possible connection between increased fat in lymph nodes and breast cancer progression, which could help in understanding prognosis.
  • A new deep learning model identified distinct changes in the structure of non-metastatic lymph nodes of obese patients, revealing larger fat cells, more white space, and increased red blood cells, with potential implications for lymphatic dysfunction and cancer spread.

Article Abstract

Obese patients have worse breast cancer outcomes than normal weight women including a 50% to 80% increased rate of axillary nodal metastasis. Recent studies have shown a potential link between increased lymph node adipose tissue and breast cancer nodal metastasis. Further investigation into potential mechanisms underlying this link may reveal potential prognostic utility of fat-enlarged lymph nodes in breast cancer patients. In this study, a deep learning framework was developed to identify morphological differences of non-metastatic axillary nodes between node-positive and node-negative obese breast cancer patients. Pathology review of the model-selected patches found an increase in the average size of adipocytes (p-value=0.004), an increased amount of white space between lymphocytes (p-value<0.0001), and an increased amount of red blood cells (p-value<0.001) in non-metastatic lymph nodes of node-positive breast cancer patients. Our downstream immunohistology (IHC) analysis showed a decrease of CD3 expression and increase of leptin expression in fat-replaced axillary lymph nodes in obese node-positive patients. In summary, our findings suggest a novel direction to further investigate the crosstalk between lymph node adiposity, lymphatic dysfunction, and breast cancer nodal metastases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10153305PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.14.23288545DOI Listing

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