Author:
Nagasawa Satoi,Kuze Yuta,Maeda Ichiro,Kojima Yasuyuki,Motoyoshi Ai,Onishi Tatsuya,Iwatani Tsuguo,Yokoe Takamichi,Koike Junki,Chosokabe Motohiro,Kubota Manabu,Seino Hibiki,Suzuki Ayako,Seki Masahide,Tsuchihara Katsuya,Inoue Eisuke,Tsugawa Koichiro,Ohta Tomohiko,Suzuki Yutaka
Abstract
AbstractA substantial number of cases of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast will never progress to invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC), indicating they are overtreated under the current criteria. Although various candidate markers are available, the relevant markers for delineating the risk categories have not been established. In this study, we analyzed of the integrated clinical features of 431 cases of DCIS followed by deep sequence analyses in a 21-case discovery cohort and a 72-case validation cohort. We identified the five most critical markers of the aggressiveness of DCIS: age <45 years,HER2amplification,GATA3mutation positivity,PIK3CAmutation negativity, and PgR protein negativity. Spatial transcriptome and single-cell DNA sequencing further revealed thatGATA3dysfunction, but notPIK3CAmutation, upregulates EMT, invasion, and angiogenic pathways followed by PgR downregulation. These results reveal the existence of heterogeneous populations of DCIS and provide predictive markers for classifying DCIS and optimizing treatment.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory