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Featured researches published by Anita Bane.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2007

BRCA2 mutation-associated breast cancers exhibit a distinguishing phenotype based on morphology and molecular profiles from tissue microarrays

Anita Bane; Jeanne C. Beck; Ira J. Bleiweiss; Saundra S. Buys; Edison Catalano; Mary B. Daly; Graham G. Giles; Andy K. Godwin; Hanina Hibshoosh; John L. Hopper; Esther M. John; Lester J. Layfield; Teri A. Longacre; Alexander Miron; Rubie Senie; Melissa C. Southey; Dee W. West; Alice S. Whittemore; Hong Wu; Irene L. Andrulis; Frances P. O'Malley

A distinct morphologic and molecular phenotype has been reported for BRCA1-associated breast cancers; however, the phenotype of BRCA2-associated breast cancers is less certain. To comprehensively characterize BRCA2-associated breast cancers we performed a retrospective case control study using tumors accrued through the Breast Cancer Family Registry. We examined the tumor morphology and hormone receptor status in 157 hereditary breast cancers with germline mutations in BRCA2 and 314 control tumors negative for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations that were matched for age and ethnicity. Tissue microarrays were constructed from 64 BRCA2-associated and 185 control tumors. Tissue microarray sections were examined for HER2/neu protein overexpression, p53 status and the expression of basal markers, luminal markers, cyclin D1, bcl2, and MIB1 by immunohistochemistry. The majority of BRCA2-associated tumors and control tumors were invasive ductal, no special-type tumors. In contrast to control tumors, BRCA2-associated cancers were more likely to be high grade (P<0.0001) and to have pushing tumor margins (P=0.0005). Adjusting for grade, BRCA2-associated tumors were more often estrogen receptor positive (P=0.008) and exhibited a luminal phenotype (P=0.003). They were less likely than controls to express the basal cytokeratin CK5 (P=0.03) or to overexpress HER2/neu protein (P=0.06). There was no difference in p53, bcl2, MIB1, or cyclin D1 expression between BRCA2-associated and control tumors. We have demonstrated, in the largest series of BRCA2-associated breast cancers studied to date, that these tumors are predominantly high-grade invasive ductal carcinomas of no special type and they demonstrate a luminal phenotype despite their high histologic grade.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

A role for the TGFβ-Par6 polarity pathway in breast cancer progression

Alicia Viloria-Petit; Laurent David; Jun Yong Jia; Tuba Erdemir; Anita Bane; Dushanthi Pinnaduwage; Luba Roncari; Masahiro Narimatsu; Rohit Bose; Jason Moffat; John W. Wong; Robert S. Kerbel; Frances P. O'Malley; Irene L. Andrulis; Jeffrey L. Wrana

The role of polarity signaling in cancer metastasis is ill defined. Using two three-dimensional culture models of mammary epithelial cells and an orthotopic mouse model of breast cancer, we reveal that Par6 signaling, which is regulated directly by TGFβ, plays a role in breast cancer metastasis. Interference with Par6 signaling blocked TGFβ-dependent loss of polarity in acini-like structures formed by non-transformed mammary cells grown in three-dimensional structures and suppressed the protrusive morphology of mesenchymal-like invasive mammary tumor cells without rescuing E-cadherin expression. Moreover, blockade of Par6 signaling in an in vivo orthotopic model of metastatic breast cancer induced the formation of ZO-1-positive epithelium-like structures in the primary tumor and suppressed metastasis to the lungs. Analysis of the pathway in tissue microarrays of human breast tumors further revealed that Par6 activation correlated with markers of the basal carcinoma subtype in BRCA1-associated tumors. These studies thus reveal a key role for polarity signaling and the control of morphologic transformation in breast cancer metastasis.


Modern Pathology | 2015

An international study to increase concordance in Ki67 scoring

Mei Yin C. Polley; Samuel C. Y. Leung; Dongxia Gao; Mauro G. Mastropasqua; Lila Zabaglo; John M. S. Bartlett; Lisa M. McShane; Rebecca A. Enos; Sunil Badve; Anita Bane; Signe Borgquist; Susan Fineberg; Ming Gang Lin; Allen M. Gown; Dorthe Grabau; Carolina Gutierrez; Judith Hugh; Takuya Moriya; Yasuyo Ohi; C. Kent Osborne; Frédérique Penault-Llorca; Tammy Piper; Peggy L. Porter; Takashi Sakatani; Roberto Salgado; Jane Starczynski; Anne Vibeke Lænkholm; Giuseppe Viale; Mitch Dowsett; Daniel F. Hayes

Although an important biomarker in breast cancer, Ki67 lacks scoring standardization, which has limited its clinical use. Our previous study found variability when laboratories used their own scoring methods on centrally stained tissue microarray slides. In this current study, 16 laboratories from eight countries calibrated to a specific Ki67 scoring method and then scored 50 centrally MIB-1 stained tissue microarray cases. Simple instructions prescribed scoring pattern and staining thresholds for determination of the percentage of stained tumor cells. To calibrate, laboratories scored 18 ‘training’ and ‘test’ web-based images. Software tracked object selection and scoring. Success for the calibration was prespecified as Root Mean Square Error of scores compared with reference <0.6 and Maximum Absolute Deviation from reference <1.0 (log2-transformed data). Prespecified success criteria for tissue microarray scoring required intraclass correlation significantly >0.70 but aiming for observed intraclass correlation ≥0.90. Laboratory performance showed non-significant but promising trends of improvement through the calibration exercise (mean Root Mean Square Error decreased from 0.6 to 0.4, Maximum Absolute Deviation from 1.6 to 0.9; paired t-test: P=0.07 for Root Mean Square Error, 0.06 for Maximum Absolute Deviation). For tissue microarray scoring, the intraclass correlation estimate was 0.94 (95% credible interval: 0.90–0.97), markedly and significantly >0.70, the prespecified minimum target for success. Some discrepancies persisted, including around clinically relevant cutoffs. After calibrating to a common scoring method via a web-based tool, laboratories can achieve high inter-laboratory reproducibility in Ki67 scoring on centrally stained tissue microarray slides. Although these data are potentially encouraging, suggesting that it may be possible to standardize scoring of Ki67 among pathology laboratories, clinically important discrepancies persist. Before this biomarker could be recommended for clinical use, future research will need to extend this approach to biopsies and whole sections, account for staining variability, and link to outcomes.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2006

BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Carriers, Oral Contraceptive Use, and Breast Cancer Before Age 50

Robert W. Haile; Duncan C. Thomas; Valerie McGuire; Anna Felberg; Esther M. John; Roger L. Milne; John L. Hopper; Mark A. Jenkins; A. Joan Levine; Mary M. Daly; Saundra S. Buys; Ruby T. Senie; Irene L. Andrulis; Julia A. Knight; Andrew K. Godwin; Melissa C. Southey; Margaret McCredie; Graham G. Giles; Lesley Andrews; Katherine L. Tucker; Alexander Miron; Carmel Apicella; Andrea Tesoriero; Anita Bane; Malcolm C. Pike; Alice S. Whittemore

Background: Understanding the effect of oral contraceptives on risk of breast cancer in BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers is important because oral contraceptive use is a common, modifiable practice. Methods: We studied 497 BRCA1 and 307 BRCA2 mutation carriers, of whom 195 and 128, respectively, had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Case-control analyses were conducted using unconditional logistic regression with adjustments for family history and familial relationships and were restricted to subjects with a reference age under 50 years. Results: For BRCA1 mutation carriers, there was no significant association between risk of breast cancer and use of oral contraceptives for at least 1 year [odds ratio (OR), 0.77; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 0.53-1.12] or duration of oral contraceptive use (Ptrend = 0.62). For BRCA2 mutation carriers, there was no association with use of oral contraceptives for at least 1 year (OR, 1.62; 95% CI, 0.90-2.92); however, there was an association of elevated risk with oral contraceptive use for at least 5 years (OR, 2.06; 95% CI, 1.08-3.94) and with duration of use (ORtrend per year of use, 1.08; P = 0.008). Similar results were obtained when we considered only use of oral contraceptives that first started in 1975 or later. Conclusions: We found no evidence overall that use of oral contraceptives for at least 1 year is associated with breast cancer risk for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers before age 50. For BRCA2 mutation carriers, use of oral contraceptives may be associated with an increased risk of breast cancer among women who use them for at least 5 years. Further studies reporting results separately for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers are needed to resolve this important issue. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2006;15(10):1863–70)


Modern Pathology | 2006

Interobserver agreement and reproducibility in classification of invasive breast carcinoma: an NCI breast cancer family registry study

Teri A. Longacre; Marguerite Ennis; Louise Quenneville; Anita Bane; Ira J. Bleiweiss; Beverley A Carter; Edison Catelano; Michael R. Hendrickson; Hanina Hibshoosh; Lester J. Layfield; Lorenzo Memeo; Hong Wu; Frances P. O'Malley

The United States National Cancer Institute Breast/Ovarian Cancer Family Registry is the largest international Registry of this type; over 37 724 individuals have been enrolled to date. One activity of this Registry is the semicentralized pathologic review of tumors from all probands. Given the semicentralized nature of the review, this study was undertaken to determine the reproducibility, source(s) of classification discrepancies and stratagems to circumvent discrepancies for histologic subtyping and grading of invasive breast cancer among the reviewing pathologists. A total of 13 pathologists reviewed 35 invasive breast cancers and classified them by primary and secondary histologic type, Nottingham grade and score. Lymph–vascular space invasion, circumscribed margins, syncytial growth and lymphocytic infiltrate were also evaluated. A training session using a separate set of slides was conducted prior to the study. General agreement, in terms of category-specific κs and percent agreement, and accuracy of classification relative to a reference standard were determined. Classification of histologic subtype was most consistent (and accurate) for mucinous carcinoma (κ=1.0), followed by tubular (κ=0.8) and lobular subtypes (κ=0.8). Classification of medullary subtype was moderate (κ=0.4), but additional evaluation of degree of lymphocytic infiltrate, syncytial growth and circumscribed margins identified most cases. Category-specific κs were moderate to good for Nottingham grade (κ=0.5–0.7), with the greatest agreement obtained in categorizing grade I (κ=0.7), and grade III tumors (κ=0.7). A flexible classification strategy that employs individual and combined criteria provides good interobserver agreement for invasive breast cancers with uniform, unambiguous histology and compensates for classification discrepancies in the more histologically ambiguous or heterogeneous cancers.


Modern Pathology | 2005

Invasive lobular carcinoma: to grade or not to grade

Anita Bane; Susanna Tjan; Robert Parkes; Irene L. Andrulis; Frances P. O'Malley

Grading of invasive ductal carcinoma of no special type using the Nottingham combined histologic grading system provides independent prognostic information. The prognostic utility of grading invasive lobular carcinomas, however, has not been fully elucidated. In addition, the relationship between grade in invasive lobular carcinomas and expression of predictive biomarkers is less certain. The purpose of this study was to correlate histologic grade in invasive lobular carcinoma with known prognostic and predictive markers. All primary resections for invasive mammary carcinomas diagnosed in Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, between the years 1996 and 2002 were reviewed (n=1053). Of these cases, 50 were pure invasive lobular carcinoma (incidence 4.7%). The median age at diagnosis was 64 years. These tumors were graded using the Nottingham combined histologic grading system and analyzed for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, HER2/neu and E-cadherin expression. Tumor grade was correlated with tumor size (P=0.03), and the American Joint Committee on Cancer nodal status (P=0.05). Assessment of the individual components of grade showed that the mitotic score was highly correlated with tumor size (P=0.02), lymph node positivity (P=0.02) and overall American Joint Committee on Cancer stage (P=0.01). Estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor were highly expressed irrespective of the grade of tumor. HER2/neu protein overexpression and E-cadherin protein expression was absent in all invasive lobular carcinomas studied. We conclude that pure invasive lobular carcinoma is uncommon and occurs predominantly in postmenopausal women. Increasing tumor grade is correlated with median tumor size and the American Joint Committee on Cancer nodal stage, but not correlated with the expression of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, E-cadherin or HER2/neu protein overexpression.


Modern Pathology | 2016

Standardized evaluation of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in breast cancer : results of the ring studies of the international immuno-oncology biomarker working group

Carsten Denkert; Stephan Wienert; Audrey Poterie; Sibylle Loibl; Jan Budczies; Sunil Badve; Zsuzsanna Bago-Horvath; Anita Bane; Shahinaz Bedri; Jane E. Brock; Ewa Chmielik; Matthias Christgen; Cecile Colpaert; Sandra Demaria; Gert Van den Eynden; Giuseppe Floris; Stephen B. Fox; Dongxia Gao; Barbara Ingold Heppner; S Rim Kim; Zuzana Kos; Hans Kreipe; Sunil R. Lakhani; Frédérique Penault-Llorca; Giancarlo Pruneri; Nina Radosevic-Robin; David L. Rimm; Stuart J. Schnitt; Bruno V. Sinn; Peter Sinn

Multiple independent studies have shown that tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are prognostic in breast cancer with potential relevance for response to immune-checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Although many groups are currently evaluating TIL, there is no standardized system for diagnostic applications. This study reports the results of two ring studies investigating TIL conducted by the International Working Group on Immuno-oncology Biomarkers. The study aim was to determine the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for evaluation of TIL by different pathologists. A total of 120 slides were evaluated by a large group of pathologists with a web-based system in ring study 1 and a more advanced software-system in ring study 2 that included an integrated feedback with standardized reference images. The predefined aim for successful ring studies 1 and 2 was an ICC above 0.7 (lower limit of 95% confidence interval (CI)). In ring study 1 the prespecified endpoint was not reached (ICC: 0.70; 95% CI: 0.62–0.78). On the basis of an analysis of sources of variation, we developed a more advanced digital image evaluation system for ring study 2, which improved the ICC to 0.89 (95% CI: 0.85–0.92). The Fleiss’ kappa value for <60 vs ≥60% TIL improved from 0.45 (ring study 1) to 0.63 in RS2 and the mean concordance improved from 88 to 92%. This large international standardization project shows that reproducible evaluation of TIL is feasible in breast cancer. This opens the way for standardized reporting of tumor immunological parameters in clinical studies and diagnostic practice. The software-guided image evaluation approach used in ring study 2 may be of value as a tool for evaluation of TIL in clinical trials and diagnostic practice. The experience gained from this approach might be applicable to the standardization of other diagnostic parameters in histopathology.


Scientific Reports | 2012

A Gene Signature for Predicting Outcome in Patients with Basal-like Breast Cancer

Robin M. Hallett; Anna Dvorkin-Gheva; Anita Bane; John A. Hassell

Basal-like breast cancer is a molecular subtype of breast cancer with a poor prognosis. Follow-up studies of long-term outcome in these patients, demonstrates they can be separated into two clinical groups: those who succumb to their disease within the first 5 years and those expected to show excellent long term survival. Currently available clinical/histopathological variables as well as molecular signatures show little capacity to identify basal breast cancer patients with either a high or low risk of disease relapse. Using data derived from 85 basal-like breast cancer patients, we identified a 14-gene signature, which we subsequently validated on an additional 49 basal breast cancer patient set. The ability to distinguish between these two sub-groups of basal breast cancer patients at the time of initial diagnosis would permit tailoring aggressive therapeutic regimens to those patients with a poor prognosis and conversely avoid such therapy in low risk patients.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2013

Clinical–pathologic significance of cancer stem cell marker expression in familial breast cancers

Anita Bane; Alicia Viloria-Petit; Dushanthi Pinnaduwage; Anna Marie Mulligan; Frances P. O’Malley; Irene L. Andrulis

Human breast cancer cells with a CD44+/CD24−/low or ALDH1+ phenotype have been demonstrated to be enriched for cancer stem cells (CSCs) using in vitro and in vivo techniques. The aim of this study was to determine the association between CD44+/CD24−/low and ALDH1 expression with clinical–pathologic tumor characteristics, tumor molecular subtype, and survival in a well characterized collection of familial breast cancer cases. 364 familial breast cancers from the Ontario Familial Breast Cancer Registry (58 BRCA1-associated, 64 BRCA2-associated, and 242 familial non-BRCA1/2 cancers) were studied. Each tumor had a centralized pathology review performed. TMA sections of all tumors were analyzed for the expression of ER, PR, HER2, CK5, CK14, EGFR, CD44, CD24, and ALDH1. The Chi square test or Fisher’s exact test was used to analyze the marker associations with clinical–pathologic tumor variables, molecular subtype and genetic subtype. Analyses of the association of overall survival (OS) with marker status were conducted using Kaplan–Meier plots and log-rank tests. The CD44+/CD24−/low and ALDH1+ phenotypes were identified in 16% and 15% of the familial breast cancer cases, respectively, and associated with high-tumor grade, a high-mitotic count, and component features of the medullary type of breast cancer. CD44+/CD24−/low and ALDH1 expression in this series were further associated with the basal-like molecular subtype and the CD44+/CD24−/low phenotype was independently associated with BRCA1 mutational status. The currently accepted breast CSCs markers are present in a minority of familial breast cancers. Whereas the presence of these markers is correlated with several poor prognostic features and the basal-like subtype of breast cancer, they do not predict OS.


npj Breast Cancer | 2016

Analytical validation of a standardized scoring protocol for Ki67: phase 3 of an international multicenter collaboration

Samuel C. Y. Leung; Torsten O. Nielsen; Lila Zabaglo; Indu Arun; Sunil Badve; Anita Bane; John M.S. Bartlett; Signe Borgquist; Martin C. Chang; Andrew Dodson; Rebecca A. Enos; Susan Fineberg; Cm Focke; Dongxia Gao; Allen M. Gown; Dorthe Grabau; Carolina Gutierrez; Judith Hugh; Zuzana Kos; Anne-Vibeke Laenkholm; Ming-Gang Lin; Mauro G. Mastropasqua; Takuya Moriya; Sharon Nofech-Mozes; C. Kent Osborne; Frédérique Penault-Llorca; Tammy Piper; Takashi Sakatani; Roberto Salgado; Jane Starczynski

Pathological analysis of the nuclear proliferation biomarker Ki67 has multiple potential roles in breast and other cancers. However, clinical utility of the immunohistochemical (IHC) assay for Ki67 immunohistochemistry has been hampered by unacceptable between-laboratory analytical variability. The International Ki67 Working Group has conducted a series of studies aiming to decrease this variability and improve the evaluation of Ki67. This study tries to assess whether acceptable performance can be achieved on prestained core-cut biopsies using a standardized scoring method. Sections from 30 primary ER+ breast cancer core biopsies were centrally stained for Ki67 and circulated among 22 laboratories in 11 countries. Each laboratory scored Ki67 using three methods: (1) global (4 fields of 100 cells each); (2) weighted global (same as global but weighted by estimated percentages of total area); and (3) hot-spot (single field of 500 cells). The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), a measure of interlaboratory agreement, for the unweighted global method (0.87; 95% credible interval (CI): 0.81–0.93) met the prespecified success criterion for scoring reproducibility, whereas that for the weighted global (0.87; 95% CI: 0.7999–0.93) and hot-spot methods (0.84; 95% CI: 0.77–0.92) marginally failed to do so. The unweighted global assessment of Ki67 IHC analysis on core biopsies met the prespecified criterion of success for scoring reproducibility. A few cases still showed large scoring discrepancies. Establishment of external quality assessment schemes is likely to improve the agreement between laboratories further. Additional evaluations are needed to assess staining variability and clinical validity in appropriate cohorts of samples.

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Dongxia Gao

University of British Columbia

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