BACKGROUND: Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1)-positive cells exhibit stem-like or progenitor ability and have been considered a clinically important diagnostic and therapeutic target in patients with breast cancer. In this study, the authors evaluated responsiveness to chemotherapy of ALDH1-positive cells in primary and metastatic lesions and its relation to prognosis for patients with lymph node-positive breast cancer. METHODS: In total, 115 patients who had breast cancer with cytologically confirmed lymph node metastases and who underwent surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) were evaluated. By using ALDH1 immunohistochemistry in core-needle biopsy specimens of the primary tumor, cytology samples of axillary lymph nodes before NAC, and pathologic samples of each after NAC, the clinical significance of ALDH1-positive cell status was evaluated in primary and metastatic lesions before and after NAC. RESULTS: The presence of ALDH1-positive cancer cells, but not ALDH1-negative cancer cells, in primary and metastatic lesions after NAC was associated with a worse prognosis. In multivariate analysis, only ALDH1-positive cells in metastatic lesions after NAC correlated with overall survival. The responsiveness of ALDH1-positive cells to chemotherapy differed between primary and metastatic lesions, and the findings indicated that ALDH1-positive cells in metastatic lesions after NAC may clinically precede those in the primary lesion. CONCLUSIONS: The responsiveness of ALDH1-positive cells to chemotherapy in primary and metastatic lesions and its prognostic significance were clarified in patients with breast cancer. The authors concluded that ALDH1-positive status may represent a surrogate marker as a new concept in patients with lymph node-positive breast cancer. Cancer 2012;118:3899-910. V C 2011 American Cancer Society.
The present series evaluated the therapeutic effect of NAC on breast tumors and metastasized lymph nodes, and a significant correlation with patient outcome was observed. Evaluating the response rate measured by imaging could be used as a surrogate marker for prognosis before assessment of the pathological response which is ordinarily obtained after surgery.
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