Francisco E. Gago
National University of Cuyo
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Featured researches published by Francisco E. Gago.
International Journal of Cancer | 1998
Laura M. Vargas-Roig; Francisco E. Gago; Olga Tello; Juan C. Aznar; Daniel R. Ciocca
Heat shock proteins (Hsps) are induced in vitro by several cytotoxic drugs; in human breast cancer cells these proteins appear to be involved in anti‐cancer drug resistance. The present report was designed to analyze whether chemotherapy affects in vivo the expression of Hsp27, Hsp70, Hsc70 and Hsp90 in breast cancer patients treated with induction chemotherapy and whether these proteins may be determinants of tumor resistance to drug administration. We have analyzed 35 biopsies from breast cancer patients treated with induction chemotherapy. Expression of the Hsps in the tumors was compared with (i) histological and clinical responses to chemotherapy, (ii) tumor cell proliferation measured by proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunostaining and nucleolar organizer regions (AgNORs) staining and (iii) the expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors. We also compared disease‐free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) with the expression of the Hsps studied. After chemotherapy, nuclear Hsp27 and Hsp70 expression was increased and Hsp70 and Hsc70 cytoplasmic expression was decreased. A high nuclear proportion of Hsp70 in tumor cells (>10%) correlated significantly with drug resistance. We also observed that patients whose tumors expressed nuclear or a high cytoplasmic proportion (>66%) of Hsp27 had shorter DFS.<0B> <0R>The combination of Hsp27 and Hsp70 levels showed a strong correlation with DFS. Neither the cellular proliferation nor the levels of steroid receptors showed any significant difference before or after drug administration or during follow‐up of patients. Our results suggest that Hsp27 and Hsp70 are involved in drug resistance in breast cancer patients treated with combination chemotherapies. Int. J. Cancer (Pred. Oncol.) 79:468–475, 1998.© 1998 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
American Journal of Pathology | 2009
Erica K. Sloan; Daniel R. Ciocca; Normand Pouliot; Anthony Natoli; Christina Restall; Michael A. Henderson; Mariel A. Fanelli; Fernando D. Cuello-Carrión; Francisco E. Gago; Robin L. Anderson
Caveolin-1 has been linked to tumor progression and clinical outcome in breast cancer, but a clear resolution of its role as a prognostic marker is lacking. We assessed caveolin-1 levels in normal breast tissue and two breast cancer cohorts for which outcome data were available. We found that caveolin-1 was not expressed in normal breast luminal epithelium but was present in the epithelial compartment of some tumors. We found no association between caveolin-1 expression in the epithelial compartment and clinical outcome. However, high levels of caveolin-1 in the stromal tissue surrounding the tumor, rather than within tumor cells, associated strongly with reduced metastasis and improved survival (P < 0.0001). The onset of mammary tumors driven by Her2/neu overexpression was accelerated in mice lacking caveolin-1, thereby supporting the observation that the presence of caveolin-1 in the tumor microenvironment modulates tumor development. These studies suggest that stromal caveolin-1 expression may be a potential therapeutic target and a valuable prognostic indicator of breast cancer progression.
International Journal of Cancer | 1999
Laura M. Vargas-Roig; Francisco E. Gago; Olga Tello; María T. Martin de Civetta; Daniel R. Ciocca
Expression of c‐erbB‐2 protein has been associated with poor prognosis and poor response to chemotherapy in breast cancer patients. In the present prospective study, we have analyzed whether c‐erbB‐2, p53 and P170 proteins may be determinants of tumor resistance in locally advanced breast cancer patients treated with induction chemotherapy. Biopsies (n = 60) were examined by immuno‐histochemistry; in 62% of cases core or incisional biopsies were taken before drug administration, allowing comparison in paired biopsies of the cytological and molecular changes induced by treatment. Sixty percent of the patients received relatively high doses of FAC or FEC (5‐fluorouracil, doxorubicin or epirubicin and cyclophosphamide), and 40% received relatively high doses of doxorubicin or epirubicin alone. No significant changes were observed in the molecular markers studied following chemotherapy; in the few biopsies where changes appeared, the changes did not exhibit any significant or similar trend. For 30 of the patients who received FAC/FEC treatment, follow‐up reached a median of 34 months. In these cases, neither the clinical (reduction in tumor size) nor the histological (evaluated after neoadjuvant chemotherapy) responses showed statistically significant differences between the patients who developed distant metastases and the disease‐free patients. c‐erbB‐2 was over‐expressed in 50% of patients who developed distant metastases vs. 7% of the disease‐free patients. Disease free survival (DFS) curves between c‐erbB‐2‐positive and c‐erbB‐2‐negative patients were statistically significant. No correlation between p53 or P170 expression with DFS was found. Our results suggest that c‐erbB‐2 protein expression is associated with development of distant metastases in breast cancer patients treated with relatively high doses of anthracyclines in induction chemotherapy. Int. J. Cancer (Pred. Oncol.) 84:129–134, 1999.
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1990
Daniel R. Ciocca; Libertad A. Puy; Liliana C. Fasoli; Olga Tello; Juan C. Aznar; Francisco E. Gago; Sara I. Papa; Roberto Sonego
SummaryThe presence of immunoreactive adrenocorticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), luteinizing hormonereleasing hormone (LHRH), growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), and somatostatin has been investigated by immunohistochemistry in forty biopsies from breast cancer patients. All of these hypothalamic hormones were found in about 30% of the samples, seen in the cytoplasm or in the nuclei of the tumor cells. Positive immunostaining for the hypothalamic hormones was present in colloid, lobular, and infiltrating ductal carcinomas. There was not a clear relationship between occurrence of staining for the hypothalamic hormones and the histologic grade of tumors or the clinical stage of the disease. Immunoreactive LHRH was more frequently found in breast tumors with estrogen and progesterone receptors. On the other hand, preneoplastic breast lesions expressed mainly somatostatin, while immunoreactivity was absent in normal mammary tissue.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1998
Francisco E. Gago; Olga Tello; Angela M. Diblasi; Daniel R. Ciocca
In this study we have examined biopsies from women with localized primary breast cancer to investigate the prognostic performance of estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR) for estimating the metastatic probability of the patients, and to explore whether discrimination gets better by combining clinicopathological and other molecular parameters into a score. This prospective study involved 205 patients with a median follow-up of 5 y. Among the evaluated clinicopathological data were: patients age; tumor size; axillary lymph node involvement; and tumor grade. The most representative tumor samples were derived to a single laboratory for immunohistochemical evaluation of the following molecular markers: ER, PR, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), p53 protein product, erbB-2 (HER-2/neu) oncoprotein, and P170 glycoprotein (mdrl gen product). Distant metastases (study endpoint) appeared in 19.5% (40/205) of the patients, most of these patients presented a mixture of poor, regular and good prognostic factors. Disease-free survival analysis procedures (Kaplan-Meier method) identified tumor size, axillary lymph node involvement, tumor grade, receptor status, PCNA, p53, erbB-2 and P170 as useful prognostic factors. Proportional hazard regression analysis (Cox) identified in order of importance erbB-2, tumor size, receptors status, tumor grade and PCNA as useful prognostic factors. To facilitate the evaluation of the prognostic factors, a practical and simple score system was derived. A high pathological score identified 65% of the patients that developed distant metastases, while a high molecular score was obtained in 57% of patients with metastatic disease. There was a significant improvement in the diagnosis of probability of being with distant metastases when the pathological score was combined with the molecular score, 82% of the patients with distant metastases showed an elevated combined score. Validation of this scoring system will need further larger studies (validation set as opposed to the training set used in the present study). Due to the complexity of events in cancer, the evaluation of a combination of prognostic factors should be of value to clinicians to make a more objective estimate of the prognosis of individual breast cancer patients.
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1996
Mariel A. Fanelli; Laura M. Vargas-Roig; Francisco E. Gago; Olga Tello; Rodolfo Lucero De Angelis; Daniel R. Ciocca
SummaryThe breast is a target organ for estrogens and progesterone. These hormones control several functions of the normal and abnormal mammary epithelium including cell proliferation. Most of the actions of estrogens and progesterone are mediated via specific steroid receptors, and one would expect that proliferating cells should contain estrogen receptors (ER) and/or progesterone receptors (PR). However, the correlation between receptor expression and cell proliferation is still controversial. In the present study we have examined 29 human breast cancer samples; in 17 of them we evaluated the simultaneous ER and PR localization with that of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and silver-stained nucleolar organizer regions (AgNORs) in a cell-by-cell study. We found that in almost 50% of the tumor biopsies examined, the cells expressing ER were significantly associated with elevated cell proliferation. In another group (38%) there were not significant differences between ER expression and cell proliferation. In only one of the samples (6%) the cells expressing ER showed lower cell proliferation. The study also revealed that in 44% of the tumors the PR expressing cells were associated with elevated cell proliferation. In a second group the PR expression was not significantly associated with cell proliferation (33% of the cases). Finally, in 22% of the samples the cells carrying PR showed lower cell proliferation. We also detected lower ER immunoreactivity in 30% of the breast cancer biopsies with one of the monoclonal antibodies against ER (antibody 1D5 directed against the A/B domain). This group of tumors was PR-negative (or very weakly positive) and had high proliferation. The presence of tumors with ‘abnormal’ ER proteins and displaying ER/PR significantly associated with elevated cell proliferation could have implications in human breast cancer treatment.
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2012
Diego M. Marzese; Dave S.B. Hoon; Kelly K. Chong; Francisco E. Gago; Javier I. J. Orozco; Olga Tello; Laura M. Vargas-Roig; María Roqué
Breast carcinogenesis is a multistep process that involves both genetic and epigenetic alterations. Identification of aberrantly methylated genes in breast tumors and their relation to clinical parameters can contribute to improved diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic decision making. Our objective in the present study was to identify the methylation status of 34 cancer-involved genes in invasive ductal carcinomas (IDC). Each of the 70 IDC cases analyzed had a unique methylation profile. The highest methylation frequency was detected in the WT1 (95.7%) and RASSF1 (71.4%) genes. Hierarchical cluster analysis revealed three clusters with different distribution of the prognostic factors tumor grade, lymph node metastasis, and proliferation rate. Methylation of TP73 was associated with high histological grade and high proliferation rate; methylation of RARB was associated with lymph node metastasis. Concurrent methylation of TP73 and RARB was associated with high histological grade, high proliferation rate, increased tumor size, and lymph node metastasis. Patients with more than six methylated genes had higher rates of relapse events and cancer deaths. In multivariate analysis, TP73 methylation and the methylation index were associated with disease outcome. Our results indicate that methylation index and methylation of TP73 and/or RARB are related to unfavorable prognostic factors in patients with IDC. These epigenetic markers should be validated in further studies to improve breast cancer management.
Molecular Oncology | 2008
Laura M. Vargas-Roig; F. Darío Cuello-Carrión; Nicolás Fernández-Escobar; Pedro Daguerre; Marcela Leuzzi; Jorge Ibarra; Francisco E. Gago; Silvina Beatriz Nadin; Daniel R. Ciocca
We have analyzed the predictive/prognostic value of Bcl‐2 protein in breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. One hundred and ten patients were submitted to two different chemotherapeutic regimens: a) 5‐fluorouracil, adriamycin or epirubicin, and cyclophosphamide (FAC/FEC) during 2–6 cycles before surgery and 3 or 4 additional cycles of FAC/FEC after surgery (n=40) and b) doxorubicin (D) 75mg/m2 or epirubicin (E) 120mg/m2 during 4 cycles before surgery, and 6 cycles of cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and 5‐fluorouracil (CMF) after surgery (n=70). Bcl‐2 expression, evaluated by immunohistochemistry, did not change significantly after chemotherapy and was not related to clinical/pathological response. In FAC/FEC group, Bcl‐2 positive expression after chemotherapy correlated with better disease free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) (P=0.008 and P=0.001). In D/E group, Bcl‐2 also correlated with better DFS and OS (P=0.03 and P=0.054) in the post‐chemotherapy biopsies. An unusual nuclear localization of Bax was observed in some biopsies, but this localization did not correlate with the tumor response or outcome of the patients. We found that a high Bcl‐2 expression had no predictive value but had prognostic value in breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant anthracycline based chemotherapy.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2006
Francisco E. Gago; Mariel A. Fanelli; Daniel R. Ciocca
In breast cancer patients, the expression of steroid hormone receptors (HR:ERalpha/PR) appears inversely correlated with Her2/neu (not all reports agree on this negative correlation). Moreover, some but not all studies suggest that HR+/Her2/neu+ patients have a poor response to endocrine therapy, making this special group a matter of debate. In this prospective study we have analyzed the clinical outcome of our HR+/Her2/neu+ patients (n=51) selected from 516 consecutive stages I-II cases, with a follow-up 5-10 years (mean 7.3), treated with standard adjuvant therapy with tamoxifen (TAM) (TAM alone or TAM after chemotherapy). This group was compared with the HR+/Her-2/neu- patients (n=129) treated also with TAM. The tumor biopsies were studied by immunohistochemistry. We found that the association HR+/Her2/neu- was 2.5 times higher than the association HR+/Her2/neu+ (25% versus 9.9%, respectively). Our study also showed that the disease free survival (DFS) of the patients co-expressing HR and Her2/neu was significantly lower than those expressing HR but lacking of Her2/neu (p<0.001). A similar result was obtained when the overall survival (OS) was evaluated (p=0.001). All of these patients received hormone therapy with TAM, alone or after chemotherapy. When the analysis was performed in the patients treated with TAM alone, again the expression of Her-2/neu had a negative impact on both the DFS and the OS (p<0.05).
Journal of Medical Case Reports | 2011
Diego M. Marzese; Francisco E. Gago; Javier I. J. Orozco; Olga Tello; María Roque; Laura M. Vargas-Roig
IntroductionGiant fibroadenoma is an uncommon variant of benign breast lesions. Aberrant methylation of CpG islands in promoter regions is known to be involved in the silencing of genes (for example, tumor-suppressor genes) and appears to be an early event in the etiology of breast carcinogenesis. Only hypermethylation of p16INK4a has been reported in non-giant breast fibroadenoma. In this particular case, there are no previously published data on epigenetic alterations in giant fibroadenomas. Our previous results, based on the analysis of 49 cancer-related CpG islands have confirmed that the aberrant methylation is specific to malignant breast tumors and that it is completely absent in normal breast tissue and breast fibroadenomas.Case presentationA 13-year-old Hispanic girl was referred after she had noted a progressive development of a mass in her left breast. On physical examination, a 10 × 10 cm lump was detected and axillary lymph nodes were not enlarged. After surgical removal the lump was diagnosed as a giant fibroadenoma. Because of the high growth rate of this benign tumor, we decided to analyze the methylation status of 49 CpG islands related to cell growth control. We have identified the methylation of five cancer-related CpG islands in the giant fibroadenoma tissue: ESR1, MGMT, WT-1, BRCA2 and CD44.ConclusionIn this case report we show for the first time the methylation analysis of a giant fibroadenoma. The detection of methylation of these five cancer-related regions indicates substantial epigenomic differences with non-giant fibroadenomas. Epigenetic alterations could explain the higher growth rate of this tumor. Our data contribute to the growing knowledge of aberrant methylation in breast diseases. In this particular case, there exist no previous data regarding the role of methylation in giant fibroadenomas, considered by definition as a benign breast lesion.