Evaluation of chromosome aneuploidy in tissue sections of preinvasive breast carcinomas using interphase cytogenetics
Open Access
- 15 January 1996
- Vol. 77 (2) , 315-320
- https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0142(19960115)77:2<315::aid-cncr14>3.0.co;2-4
Abstract
BACKGROUND Little is known about cellular level genetic alterations in preinvasive breast lesions, particularly lobular carcinoma in situ. METHODS We employed fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using pericentromeric (alpha satellite) probes to assess numerical alterations of chromosomes 1, 7, 8, 16, 17, and X in deparaffinized archival tissue sections of 9 lobular carcinomas in situ (LCIS), 10 ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS), and a spectrum of proliferative lesions (including 3 ductal hyperplasias, 1 adenosis, 1 radial scar, and 2 atypical hyperplasias). Three of the LCIS lesions and five of the DCIS lesions were from patients who had a concurrent invasive neoplasm as a component of the tumor. RESULTS None of the proliferative lesions exhibited detectable chromosome gains, and only 1 showed evidence of signal loss consistent with monosomy (chromosome 7 in the adenosis lesion). Six LCIS patients (67%) displayed evidence of monosomy, with involvement of chromosome 17 in 6 of 6 patients, chromosome 8 in 2 of 6 patients, and chromosome 7 in 2 of 6 patients. Two LCIS patients, each of whom had a concurrent invasive neoplasm, exhibited signal gains consistent with trisomy for chromosomes 1 and 8 (1 patient each). Chromosome aneuploidies were observed in 7 of 10 (70%) DCIS patients, including 2 of 5 patients (40%) without concurrent invasive neoplasm and 5 of 5 patients (100%) with concurrent invasive neoplasm. The pattern of numerical chromosome alteration in DCIS included two patients with losses only, 2 patients with gains only, and 3 patients with both gains and losses (i.e., involving different chromosomes). Chromosome 17 aneuploidy was observed in all DCIS and all LCIS patients who exhibited abnormalities; however, DCIS patients showed more frequent aneuploidies for chromosomes X and 16 (0 LCIS patients vs. 4 DCIS patients with each). CONCLUSIONS Distinctive pathologic subsets of preinvasive breast neoplasia have divergent patterns of genetic instability. Foci of residual in situ neoplasia that accompany invasive disease may have a greater degree of genetic instability than neoplasms that lack progression to invasive phenotype. Cancer 1996;77:315‐20.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Detection of chromosome aneuploidy in breast lesions with fluorescence in situ hybridization: Comparison of whole nuclei to thin tissue sections and correlation with flow cytometric DNA analysisCytometry, 1995
- Chromosomein situ hybridization on formalin-fixed mammary tissue using non-isotopic, non-fluorescent probes: technical considerations and biological implicationsBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1992
- Interphase cytogenetics of tumoursThe Journal of Pathology, 1992
- DNA analysis of ductal carcinomaIn situ of the breast. A comparison with histologic featuresCancer, 1991
- Breast cancer genetic evolution: I. Data from cytogenetics and DNA contentBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1991
- Detection of monosomy in interphase nuclei and identification of marker chromosomes using biotinylated alpha-satellite DNA probesCancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 1991
- Characterization of chromosomal anomalies in human breast cancerCancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 1990
- Cytogenetics of breast cancerCancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 1990
- Chromosome Analysis of in Situ Breast CancerActa Oncologica, 1989
- Cytogenetic analysis in human breast carcinoma. I. Nine cases in the diploid range investigated using direct preparationsCancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 1984