Race specific differences in DNA damage repair dysregulation in breast cancer and association with outcome

2020 
IMPORTANCE: African American (AA) breast cancer patients have worse outcomes than Caucasian Americans (CAs). DNA damage repair (DDR) genes drive poor outcome in CA estrogen receptor (ER)+ breast cancer patients. Whether DDR genes similarly impact survival in AAs is unknown. Identifying AA-specific patterns of DDR dysregulation could change how we tailor predictive/prognostic biomarkers. OBJECTIVE: To characterize DDR dysregulation in ER+ AA patient tumors and test associations with clinical outcome. DESIGN SETTINGS AND PARTICIPANTS: Three independent tumor, and two normal breast datasets were analyzed. Tumor datasets: (1) GSE78958 (2) GSE18229 (3) The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Normal datasets: (4) GSE43973 (5) GSE50939. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES: Up/down-regulation of 104 DDR genes was assessed in AA samples vs CAs. Survival associations were assessed for genes dysregulated in multiple datasets. RESULTS: Overall, RNA levels of single strand break repair (SSBR) genes were downregulated in AA tumors and double strand break repair (DSBR) genes were upregulated compared to CAs. While SSBR downregulation was mainly detected in tumors, DSBR upregulation was detectable in both tumor and normal breast AA samples. Seven specific DDR genes identified as dysregulated in AAs vs CAs in multiple datasets associated with poor survival. A subset of tumors with simultaneous dysregulation of homologous recombination and single strand break repair genes was enriched in AAs and had associated consistently with poor survival. CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: Overall, these results constitute the first systematic analysis of differences in DDR regulation in AA ER+ tumors and normal tissue vs CAs. We identify a profile of DDR dysregulation enriched in AA patients, which associates with poor outcome. These results suggest a distinct molecular mechanism of DDR regulation in AAs that lays the groundwork for refining biomarker profiles by race and improving precision medicine for underserved populations.
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