<div><p>Most women with estrogen receptor expressing breast cancers receiving anti-estrogens such as tamoxifen may not need or benefit from them. Besides the estrogen receptor, there are no predictive biomarkers to help select breast cancer patients for tamoxifen treatment. CCND1 (cyclin D1) gene amplification is a putative candidate tamoxifen predictive biomarker. The RSF1 (remodeling and spacing factor 1) gene is frequently co-amplified with CCND1 on chromosome 11q. We validated the predictive value of these biomarkers in the MA.12 randomized study of adjuvant tamoxifen vs. placebo in high-risk premenopausal early breast cancer. Premenopausal women with node-positive/high-risk node-negative early breast cancer received standard adjuvant c...
Background: Estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancers (BC) are heterogeneous with regard to th...
A case-control study from two randomised breast cancer prevention trials of tamoxifen and raloxifene...
Breast cancer (BC) exhibits great heterogeneity at histophatological, clinical and molecular levels....
Introduction: Gene amplification of CCND1 is observed in a subgroup of breast cancers with poor prog...
It is well-known that a majority of breast cancers are hormone-dependent, making endocrine therapy a...
CCND1 encodes for the cyclin D1 protein involved in G1/S cell cycle transition. In breast cancer the...
BACKGROUND: Use of cyclin D1 (CCND1) gene amplification as a breast cancer biomarker has been hamper...
Hormone-receptor positive breast cancer is the most common molecular subtype and represents 60–75 % ...
Introduction: The amplification event occurring at chromosome locus 11q13, reported in several diffe...
<p>RFS for patients with RSF1 gene amplification or not, showing benefit from tamoxifen in both grou...
Background: Controversy exists for the use of Ki67 protein expression as a predictive marker to sele...
ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: The amplification event occurring at chromosome locus 11q13, reported in sev...
The growth and development of the breast is to a large extent regulated by oestrogens through the oe...
<p>RFS for patients with CCND1 gene amplification or not, showing benefit from tamoxifen in both gro...
Contains fulltext : 139100.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)To identify mol...
Background: Estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancers (BC) are heterogeneous with regard to th...
A case-control study from two randomised breast cancer prevention trials of tamoxifen and raloxifene...
Breast cancer (BC) exhibits great heterogeneity at histophatological, clinical and molecular levels....
Introduction: Gene amplification of CCND1 is observed in a subgroup of breast cancers with poor prog...
It is well-known that a majority of breast cancers are hormone-dependent, making endocrine therapy a...
CCND1 encodes for the cyclin D1 protein involved in G1/S cell cycle transition. In breast cancer the...
BACKGROUND: Use of cyclin D1 (CCND1) gene amplification as a breast cancer biomarker has been hamper...
Hormone-receptor positive breast cancer is the most common molecular subtype and represents 60–75 % ...
Introduction: The amplification event occurring at chromosome locus 11q13, reported in several diffe...
<p>RFS for patients with RSF1 gene amplification or not, showing benefit from tamoxifen in both grou...
Background: Controversy exists for the use of Ki67 protein expression as a predictive marker to sele...
ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: The amplification event occurring at chromosome locus 11q13, reported in sev...
The growth and development of the breast is to a large extent regulated by oestrogens through the oe...
<p>RFS for patients with CCND1 gene amplification or not, showing benefit from tamoxifen in both gro...
Contains fulltext : 139100.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)To identify mol...
Background: Estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancers (BC) are heterogeneous with regard to th...
A case-control study from two randomised breast cancer prevention trials of tamoxifen and raloxifene...
Breast cancer (BC) exhibits great heterogeneity at histophatological, clinical and molecular levels....