Plasma Proteome Signature to Predict the Outcome of Breast Cancer Patients Receiving Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy

Author:

Gwark SungchanORCID,Ahn Hee-SungORCID,Yeom JeonghunORCID,Yu Jiyoung,Oh Yumi,Jeong Jae Ho,Ahn Jin-Hee,Jung Kyung Hae,Kim Sung-Bae,Lee Hee JinORCID,Gong Gyungyub,Lee Sae Byul,Chung Il Yong,Kim Hee Jeong,Ko Beom Seok,Lee Jong Won,Son Byung Ho,Ahn Sei Hyun,Kim KyunggonORCID,Kim JisunORCID

Abstract

The plasma proteome of 51 non-metastatic breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCT) was prospectively analyzed by high-resolution mass spectrometry coupled with nano-flow liquid chromatography using blood drawn at the time of diagnosis. Plasma proteins were identified as potential biomarkers, and their correlation with clinicopathological variables and survival outcomes was analyzed. Of 51 patients, 20 (39.2%) were HR+/HER2-, five (9.8%) were HR+/HER2+, five (9.8%) were HER2+, and 21 (41.2%) were triple-negative subtype. During a median follow-up of 52.0 months, there were 15 relapses (29.4%) and eight deaths (15.7%). Four potential biomarkers were identified among differentially expressed proteins: APOC3 had higher plasma concentrations in the pathological complete response (pCR) group, whereas MBL2, ENG, and P4HB were higher in the non-pCR group. Proteins statistically significantly associated with survival and capable of differentiating low- and high-risk groups were MBL2 and P4HB for disease-free survival, P4HB for overall survival, and MBL2 for distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS). In the multivariate analysis, only MBL2 was a consistent risk factor for DMFS (HR: 9.65, 95% CI 2.10–44.31). The results demonstrate that the proteomes from non-invasive sampling correlate with pCR and survival in breast cancer patients receiving NCT. Further investigation may clarify the role of these proteins in predicting prognosis and thus their therapeutic potential for the prevention of recurrence.

Funder

Korea Breast Cancer Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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