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The relationship of multifocality and tumor burden with various tumor characteristics and survival in early breast cancer

G. KELEMEN, V. FARKAS, J. DEBRAH, K. ORMANDI, A. VOROS, L. KAIZER, Z. VARGA, G. LAZAR, Z. KAHAN

Abstract:

The presence of multifocality and the aggregate tumor size were retrospectively analysed in a database of 1071 operated breast cancers. Around a quarter of all these cancers involved multiple foci, while a tenth of the total demonstrated more than one invasive focus. Although the multifocal cancers were smaller and more often screen-detected than the unifocal cancers, their aggregate tumor size was larger, and they more frequently displayed casting-type calcifications in the mammogram and HER2 positivity. Lobular histology favoured larger tumor burden. The invasive multifocal cancers were more commonly lymph node-positive than the other tumors. In a subgroup of 584 patients with a median follow-up time of 5 years, the larger size of the invasive tumor, the presence of LVI or lymph node involvement, HER2 positivity and triple negativity were associated with a poorer RFS and OS, while the outcome of screen-detected tumors was superior to that of non-screen-detected or interval cancers. A large tumor size, lymph node positivity and HER2 positive or triple negative phenotypes were independent determinants of a poorer survival rate.

Issue: 5/2012

Volume: 2012

Pages: 566 — 573

DOI: 10.4149/neo_2012_073

Pubmed

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