Litcius/Paper detail

The Biomarker Ki-67: Promise, Potential, and Problems in Breast Cancer

Allen M. Gown

2022Applied immunohistochemistry & molecular morphology19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Ki-67 is a nuclear protein serendipitously discovered by monoclonal antibody selection in the early 1980s. While it has been applied for decades in the context of breast cancer as a putative prognostic and, more recently, predictive, biomarker, even after all this time there is incomplete agreement as to the validity of the immunohistochemical assays employed for Ki-67 assessment, given possible effects of the disparate methodologies employed and possible confounding preanalytical, analytical, and interpretive variables. In this brief review, the history of Ki-67 and the problems, particularly with the analytical and interpretive variables, are highlighted through a selective review of the published literature. The contributions of the International Ki-67 Breast Cancer Working Group are highlighted, and in particular, the recommendations made by this group are reviewed. The potential of Ki-67 as a biomarker for breast cancer has not yet been fully realized, but an understanding of the power as well as the limitations of the methods of Ki-67 assessment are important if this biomarker can realize its potential.

Topics & Concepts

BiomarkerBreast cancerContext (archaeology)MedicineKi-67CancerOncologyConfoundingSelection (genetic algorithm)Internal medicineImmunohistochemistryComputer scienceBiologyArtificial intelligencePaleontologyBiochemistryBreast Cancer Treatment StudiesHER2/EGFR in Cancer ResearchBreast Lesions and Carcinomas