Quantification of Cell-Free HER-2 DNA in Plasma from Breast Cancer Patients: Sensitivity for Detection of Metastatic Recurrence and Gene Amplification

Authors

  • Patricia Diana Sørensen Institute of Regional Health Research, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark
  • Rikke Fredslund Andersen Department of Clinical Immunology and Biochemistry, Vejle, Lillebaelt Hospital, Denmark
  • Niels Pallisgaard Department of Clinical Immunology and Biochemistry, Vejle, Lillebaelt Hospital, Denmark
  • Jonna Skov Madsen Institute of Regional Health Research, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark
  • Erik Hugger Jakobsen Department of Clinical Oncology Vejle, Lillebaelt Hospital, Denmark
  • Ivan Brandslund Institute of Regional Health Research, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33393/jcb.2015.2059

Keywords:

breast cancer, cell-free DNA, gene amplification, HER-2, metastatic recurrence, sensitivity

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to quantify the free-circulating plasma HER-2 DNA (cfHER-2 DNA) and to assess the ability of analysis to discriminate between patients with primary breast cancer and healthy controls in order to detect metastatic recurrence in comparison with serum HER-2 protein and also HER-2 gene amplification. The study population consisted of 100 patients with primary breast cancer and 50 healthy female donors. An additional 22 patients with metastases were subsequently included. cfHER-2 DNA was quantified with a quantitative PCR method together with a reference gene. Results: Using a cut-off of 2.5 for the ratio of the cfHER-2 DNA/reference gene, three (of 15) tissue HER-2-positive patients had a ratio >2.5 prior to the detection of metastatic disease. In the post-metastatic/pre-chemotherapy setting, 11 (of 23) tissue HER-2-positive patients with metastases had a ratio >2.5. There was no difference between absolute preoperative cfHER-2 DNA values for patients with primary breast cancer and those for healthy controls. There was no difference between cfHER-2 DNA values taken within nine months of development of the metastatic disease and the levels in patients without metastases, but there was a significant difference in the corresponding serum HER-2 protein levels in the tissue HER-2-positive patient group. Conclusion: Amplified HER-2 DNA can be detected in plasma when using a ratio between cfHER-2 DNA and a reference gene. cfHER-2 DNA could not be used to discriminate between patients with primary breast cancer and healthy controls, and could not predict the development of metastatic disease.

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Published

2015-08-31

How to Cite

Sørensen, P. D., Andersen, R. F., Pallisgaard, N., Madsen, J. S., Jakobsen, E. H., & Brandslund, I. (2015). Quantification of Cell-Free HER-2 DNA in Plasma from Breast Cancer Patients: Sensitivity for Detection of Metastatic Recurrence and Gene Amplification. Journal of Circulating Biomarkers, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.33393/jcb.2015.2059

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Original research article

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