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Cytokeratin 7, GATA3, and SOX-10 is a Comprehensive Panel in Diagnosing Triple Negative Breast Cancer Brain Metastases

Eric Statz, Julie M. Jorns

2021International Journal of Surgical Pathology20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Following lung cancer, breast cancer is the second most common metastatic tumor to the brain, of which triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2+ (HER2+) breast cancer are the most common subtypes. TNBC does not have standard immunoprofiles and can be difficult to distinguish from other metastases. A tissue microarray was created from 47 patients with breast cancer metastases to the brain and 12 paired breast primaries. Of 47 breast cancer metastases, 24 were HER2+, 14 were TNBC, and 9 were luminal. Forty-five were cytokeratin 7 (CK7) positive, 36 were GATA-binding protein 3 (GATA3) positive, 7 were Sry-related HMg-Box gene 10 (SOX-10) positive, 20 were mammaglobin positive, and 19 were gross cystic disease fluid protein 15 positive. At least one of the CK7, GATA3, or SOX-10 was positive in all TNBC metastases. A panel of CK7, GATA3, and SOX-10 is complementary in the diagnosis of breast cancer brain metastasis. SOX-10 appears to be a specific but not particularly sensitive marker in this context.

Topics & Concepts

Breast cancerCytokeratinMammaglobinTriple-negative breast cancerMedicineGATA3CancerContext (archaeology)OncologyCA15-3PathologyBrain metastasisInternal medicineMetastasisCancer researchImmunohistochemistryBiologyTranscription factorGenePaleontologyBiochemistryBrain Metastases and TreatmentMetastasis and carcinoma case studiesCancer Diagnosis and Treatment
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