Colony forming ability of human breast carcinomas: lack of prognostic significance

Abstract
To study whether colony growth in vitro reflects the prognosis of breast cancer patients, specimens from a total number of 138 patients with primary breast carcinomas were cultivated in the Courtonay-Mills soft agar method. The planting efficiency (PE) values were related to various clinical and histopathological parameters. No significant correlation was found between colony forming ability and menopausal status, histopathology, TNM-status or steroid hormone receptor status. The crude survival of the patients was not significantly correlated to the in vitro growth of the tumours; neither was there any difference in relapse-free survival between patients whost tumours failed to grow in vitro and those having growing tumours (PE > 0). A multivariate survival analysis of 115 patients with primary tumours without distant metastases revealed that the PE was not a significant independent prognostic indicator, as it gave no additional prognostic information above that of node and ER status. It is concluded that routine measurement of colony formation in vitro is not warranted in the management of breast cancer.