Equivocal (HER2 IHC 2+) breast carcinomas: gene–protein assay testing reveals association between genetic heterogeneity, individual cell amplification status and potential treatment benefits

2019 
AIMS: Genetic heterogeneity can pose a challenge to identifying eligible cases for targeted therapy in the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) immunohistochemistry (IHC) 2+ breast carcinoma group. In this study, we characterised this subset of tumours according to clinicopathological parameters. METHODS AND RESULTS: We assessed 1000 tumour cells per case and recorded the number of HER2 and chromosome enumeration probe 17 (CEP17) copies using gene-protein assay slides. HER2 status was determined based on ASCO/CAP 2013 guidelines. Tumours with 5-50% of cancer cells with amplification were considered to be heterogeneous, whereas those with >50% were considered to be non-heterogeneous. In a study cohort of 110 HER2 IHC 2+ carcinomas, 93 (84.5%) were non-amplified, 12 (10.9%) were amplified and five (4.5%) were ISH-equivocal. All the HER2-amplified and two of ISH-equivocal cases (12.7%) corresponded to non-heterogeneous tumours, with highly significant differences evident in the average HER2/CEP17 ratio (P = 0.0002) and the proportion of cells with HER2 >6 copies (P  6 copies to the average HER2/CEP17 ratio may facilitate assessment of amplification status in ISH-equivocal cases. The proportion of cells with HER2/CEP17 ≥2.0 contributes information concerning the actual average HER2/CEP17 ratio, depending on tumour type.
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