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Molecular Heterogeneity and Evolution in Breast Cancer

Jennifer L. Caswell‐Jin, Carina Lorenz, Christina Curtis

2020Annual Review of Cancer Biology29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Breast cancer comprises a heterogeneous group of tumor subtypes, whether defined by immunohistochemistry of key proteins, RNA expression profiles, or genetic alterations, and each of these subtypes may benefit from a distinct treatment approach. However, there can be striking heterogeneity within tumors, which may pose challenges to the development of personalized approaches to therapy. Intratumor heterogeneity can be divided into three main categories: genetic, phenotypic, and microenvironmental. Here, we review technologies to interrogate these three categories of heterogeneity in patient samples, as well as the current state of understanding of these categories in breast cancer, from cell to cell, across different regions of the same tumor mass, across treatment, and across metastasis. Efforts to characterize tumor heterogeneity longitudinally will be crucial to the development of personalized oncology for breast cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Genetic heterogeneityBreast cancerPhenotypeBiologyMetastasisPersonalized medicineCancerTumor heterogeneityPrecision medicineComputational biologyOncologyBioinformaticsCancer researchMedicineGeneticsGeneCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsGene expression and cancer classificationSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomics
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