Abstract B43: A preponderance of post-menopausal HER2+ breast cancer in the Vietnamese population
2016
Background: Though breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer and the leading cause of cancer death in women worldwide, relatively little is understood about the differences in prevalence and biology between various populations. For example, breast cancer is far less common in Asia than in North America, and the biology of breast cancer is likely different between these groups as well. There is some limited data to suggest that Asian breast cancer patients may have 35-40% rate of HER2+ breast cancer [1,2], as compared to 15-23% within the general American population [3,4]. Methods: To further examine this possibility, we reviewed our data at the Harris Health Systems9 Smith Clinic in Houston, Texas from September 2010 through September 2014 to further characterize the Vietnamese breast cancer patients seen during that time. Using Fisher9s Exact Test, we compared our subset of Vietnamese breast cancer patients with the publicly available SEER data from 2010[4]. Results: Among the Vietnamese patients from the Smith Clinic, we found that out of 33 patients with invasive breast cancer, 15 (45%) had HER2+ breast cancer. Interestingly, 64% of the HER2+ cohort was post-menopausal, and 50% of the post-menopausal women had HER2+ breast cancer. Compared with the 2010 SEER data that encompasses 28% of all US breast cancer patients diagnosed that year, regardless of race, the Smith Clinic Vietnamese cohort had a statistically significant higher rate of HER2+ breast cancer, with an odds ratio of 4.7 (45% vs. 15%, p Conclusion: The patterns observed in this small Vietnamese cohort, and others, do not mirror those seen in the general, multi-racial American breast cancer population. The rate of HER2+ breast cancer in the Smith Clinic Vietnamese group is twice that of the general American population. Other, larger studies have supported the findings of this small group, including a 242-patient study in Vietnam which demonstrated a 41% rate of HER2+ breast cancer; 55% of post-menopausal women had HER2 mutated tumors in this group [1]. Generally, other studies have associated older age and post-menopausal status with a lower rate of HER2+ breast cancer [5,6], but the opposite is true in these Vietnamese women. This unique pattern of breast cancer in Vietnamese women may suggest an underlying genetic or environmental driver, similar to the higher rate of triple negative breast cancer in BRCA1 carriers, or HER2+ breast cancer in women with p53 mutations. We plan to conduct further epidemiologic and genetic research in a larger cohort of Vietnamese breast cancer patients to determine whether an underlying germline genetic mutation or environmental exposure may explain this unusual pattern of breast cancer. References: 1. Thang, V.H., et al., HER2 status in operable breast cancers from Vietnamese women: Analysis by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and automated silver enhanced in situ hybridization (SISH). Acta oncologica, 2011. 50(3): p. 360-6. 2. Telli, M.L., et al., Asian ethnicity and breast cancer subtypes: a study from the California Cancer Registry. Breast cancer research and treatment, 2011. 127(2): p. 471-8. 3. Owens, M.A., B.C. Horten, and M.M. Da Silva, HER2 amplification ratios by fluorescence in situ hybridization and correlation with immunohistochemistry in a cohort of 6556 breast cancer tissues. Clinical breast cancer, 2004. 5(1): p. 63-9. 4. Howlader, N., et al., US incidence of breast cancer subtypes defined by joint hormone receptor and HER2 status. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2014. 106(5). 5. Dickens, C., et al., Racial comparison of receptor-defined breast cancer in Southern African women: subtype prevalence and age-incidence analysis of nationwide cancer registry data. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev, 2014. 23(11): p. 2311-21. 6. de Kruijf, E.M., et al., Comparison of frequencies and prognostic effect of molecular subtypes between young and elderly breast cancer patients. Mol Oncol, 2014. 8(5): p. 1014-25. Citation Format: Polly Niravath, Susan G. Hilsenbeck, Melissa Bondy. A preponderance of post-menopausal HER2+ breast cancer in the Vietnamese population. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Eighth AACR Conference on The Science of Health Disparities in Racial/Ethnic Minorities and the Medically Underserved; Nov 13-16, 2015; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2016;25(3 Suppl):Abstract nr B43.
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