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Dive into the research topics where Ming Gang Lin is active.

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Featured researches published by Ming Gang Lin.


Cancer | 2004

Racial differences in the expression of cell cycle-regulatory proteins in breast carcinoma: Study of young African American and white women in Atlanta, Georgia

Peggy L. Porter; Mary Jo Lund; Ming Gang Lin; Xiaopu Yuan; Jonathan M. Liff; Elaine W. Flagg; Ralph J. Coates; J. William Eley

African‐American (AA) women are more likely to be diagnosed with an advanced stage of breast carcinoma than are white women. After adjustment for disease stage, many studies indicate that tumors in AA women are more likely than tumors in white women are to exhibit a high level of cell proliferation and features of poor prognosis. The purpose of the current study was to compare tumor characteristics and cell cycle alterations in AA women and white women that might affect the aggressiveness of breast carcinoma.


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.


Breast Cancer Research | 2004

UDP-glucuronosyltransferase and sulfotransferase polymorphisms, sex hormone concentrations, and tumor receptor status in breast cancer patients

Rachel Sparks; Cornelia M. Ulrich; Jeannette Bigler; Shelley S. Tworoger; Yutaka Yasui; Kumar B. Rajan; Peggy L. Porter; Frank Z. Stanczyk; Rachel Ballard-Barbash; Xiaopu Yuan; Ming Gang Lin; Lynda McVarish; Erin J. Aiello; Anne McTiernan

IntroductionUDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) and sulfotransferase (SULT) enzymes are involved in removing sex hormones from circulation. Polymorphic variation in five UGT and SULT genes – UGT1A1 ((TA)6/(TA)7), UGT2B4 (Asp458Glu), UGT2B7 (His268Tyr), UGT2B15 (Asp85Tyr), and SULT1A1 (Arg213His) – may be associated with circulating sex hormone concentrations, or the risk of an estrogen receptor-negative (ER-) or progesterone receptor-negative (PR-) tumor.MethodsLogistic regression analysis was used to estimate the odds ratios of an ER- or PR- tumor associated with polymorphisms in the genes listed above for 163 breast cancer patients from a population-based cohort study of women in western Washington. Adjusted geometric mean estradiol, estrone, and testosterone concentrations were calculated within each UGT and SULT genotype for a subpopulation of postmenopausal breast cancer patients not on hormone therapy 2–3 years after diagnosis (n = 89).ResultsThe variant allele of UGT1A1 was associated with reduced risk of an ER- tumor (P for trend = 0.03), and variants of UGT2B15 and SULT1A1 were associated with non-statistically significant risk reductions. There was some indication that plasma estradiol and testosterone concentrations varied by UGT2B15 and SULT1A1 genotypes; women with the UGT2B15 Asp/Tyr and Tyr/Tyr genotypes had higher concentrations of estradiol than women with the Asp/Asp genotype (P = 0.004). Compared with women with the SULT1A1 Arg/Arg and Arg/His genotypes, women with the His/His genotype had elevated concentrations of testosterone (P = 0.003).ConclusionsThe risk of ER- breast cancer tumors may vary by UGT or SULT genotype. Further, plasma estradiol and testosterone concentrations in breast cancer patients may differ depending on some UGT and SULT genotypes.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2008

Relationship between Menopausal Hormone Therapy and Risk of Ductal, Lobular, and Ductal-Lobular Breast Carcinomas

Christopher I. Li; Kathleen E. Malone; Peggy L. Porter; Thomas J. Lawton; Lynda F. Voigt; Kara L. Cushing-Haugen; Ming Gang Lin; Xiaopu Yuan; Janet R. Daling

Combined estrogen and progestin hormone therapy (CHT) increases breast cancer risk, but this risk varies by breast cancer type. Several studies indicate that CHT is more strongly related to lobular carcinoma risk than to ductal carcinoma risk, but these studies have been limited in their assessments of recency and duration of use, and none included a centralized pathology review. We conducted a population-based case-control study consisting of 324 lobular, 196 ductal-lobular, and 524 ductal cases diagnosed from 2000 to 2004 and 469 controls ages 55 to 74 years old. Tissue specimens were centrally reviewed for 83% of cases. Associations between hormone use and breast cancer risk were evaluated using polytomous logistic regression. Current CHT users had 2.7-fold [95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.7-4.2] and 3.3-fold (95% CI, 2.0-5.7) elevated risks of lobular and ductal-lobular carcinomas, respectively, regardless of tumor stage, size, or nodal status. Elevations in risk were observed only among users of CHT for ≥3 years. Among ductal-lobular cases, CHT increased risk of tumors that were ≥50% lobular (odds ratio, 4.8; 95% CI, 2.1-11.1) but not tumors that were <50% lobular (odds ratio, 1.9; 95% CI, 0.9-4.1). Current CHT users for ≥3 years have a substantially increased risk of lobular carcinomas. Although lobular carcinomas are less common than ductal carcinomas (∼16% versus 70% of all invasive breast cancers in the United States), this duration is shorter than the 5 years of use widely cited to be needed to confer an increased risk of breast cancer overall. Further studies focusing on the etiology of lobular carcinomas are needed. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2008;17(1):43–50)


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2004

BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in women from Shanghai China

Nicola M. Suter; Roberta M. Ray; Yong Wei Hu; Ming Gang Lin; Peggy L. Porter; Dao Li Gao; Renata E. Zaucha; Lori Iwasaki; Leah P. Sabacan; Mariela C. Langlois; David B. Thomas; Elaine A. Ostrander

Little is known about the frequency of germ-line mutations in the breast cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 among Asian populations. We investigated the distribution of BRCA1 and BRCA2 germ-line mutations and polymorphisms in a cohort of women from Shanghai, China. Study subjects totaled 1306, and included 645 women with breast cancer, 342 women with benign breast disease, and 319 unaffected controls, born between 1924 and 1958, selected from women enrolled in a randomized trial of Breast Self-Examination in Shanghai, China. Women were selected without regard to family history of breast or ovarian cancer. All of the coding regions and exon-intron boundaries were screened. Data were analyzed with respect to age at diagnosis, and family history of breast and ovarian cancer. The prevalence of known disease-associated mutations in women with breast cancer was 1.1% each, for BRCA1 and BRCA2. Among breast cancer cases with a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, 8.1% and 2.7% carried likely BRCA1 and BRCA2 disease-associated mutations, respectively. Overall, these results suggest that inherited susceptibility to breast cancer due to germ-line BRCA1/2 mutations among women with a family history of breast cancer is comparable between women from Shanghai and Caucasian women of Western European descent. Most alterations observed appear unique to the Chinese population, suggesting a resource that will be useful for assessing risk among both Chinese women and United States women of Chinese descent.


International Journal of Cancer | 2005

Dietary and other risk factors in women having fibrocystic breast conditions with and without concurrent breast cancer: A nested case‐control study in Shanghai, China

Wenjin Li; Roberta M. Ray; Johanna W. Lampe; Ming Gang Lin; Dao Li Gao; Chunyuan Wu; Zakia C. Nelson; E. Dawn Fitzgibbons; Neilann K Horner; Yong Wei Hu; Jackilen Shannon; Jessie A. Satia; Ruth E. Patterson; Helge Stalsberg; David B. Thomas

Risk of breast cancer is increased in women with proliferative benign breast conditions. Most of these conditions, however, do not progress to breast cancer. The purpose of our study was to identify factors possibly associated with this progression. Women with proliferative fibrocystic breast conditions alone (214), and women with proliferative fibrocystic breast conditions and concurrent breast cancer (130), were compared to each other, and each of these groups of women were also compared to 1,070 controls; and 176 women with non‐proliferative benign breast conditions alone, and 155 also with breast cancer, were similarly compared. All study subjects were selected from a cohort of women enrolled in a trial of breast self‐examination in Shanghai. Women were interviewed to ascertain information on suspected risk factors for breast cancer and dietary habits. Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). Increased risks of both proliferative fibrocystic breast conditions alone, and with breast cancer, were associated with low parity, a prior benign breast lump and breast cancer in a first‐degree relative. Decreasing trends in the risk of both conditions with increasing intake of fruits and vegetables were observed. No factors were significantly associated with risk of breast cancer relative to risk of proliferative changes. Similar, but in some instances weaker, associations were observed for non‐proliferative fibrocystic conditions with and without breast cancer. The possible risk or protective factors that were observed in our study most likely alter the risk of breast cancer at an early stage in the carcinogenic process, and probably do not alter risk of progression from proliferative fibrocystic breast conditions to breast cancer.


Nutrition Research | 2016

Plasma equol concentration is not associated with breast cancer and fibrocystic breast conditions among women in Shanghai, China

Charlotte Atkinson; Roberta M. Ray; Wenjin Li; Ming Gang Lin; Dao Li Gao; Jackilen Shannon; Helge Stalsberg; Peggy L. Porter; Cara L. Frankenfeld; Kristiina Wähälä; David B. Thomas; Johanna W. Lampe

Equol (a bacterial metabolite of the soy isoflavone daidzein) is produced by 30% to 50% of humans and may be associated with health outcomes. We hypothesized that plasma equol would be inversely associated with risks of fibrocystic breast conditions (FBC) and breast cancer (BC). Plasma from women in a breast self-examination trial in Shanghai with BC (n=269) or FBC (n=443), and age-matched controls (n=1027) was analyzed for isoflavones. Equol was grouped into categories (<20, 20-<45, and ≥45nmol/L) and, among women with daidzein ≥20nmol/L, the log10 equol:daidzein ratio was grouped into tertiles. Where available, non-cancerous tissue (NCT) adjacent to the carcinomas from women with BC were classified as non-proliferative or proliferative (n=130 and 172, respectively). The lesions from women with FBC were similarly classified (n=99 and 92, respectively). Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated across equol categories and tertiles of log10 equol:daidzein ratio. Equol categories were not associated with FBC or BC (P>.05). For log10 equol:daidzein, compared to controls there were positive associations in the mid tertile for proliferative FBC (OR 2.06, 95% CI 1.08-3.93), BC with proliferative NCT (OR 2.95, 95% CI 1.37-6.35), and all BC regardless of histology (OR 2.37, 95% CI 1.43-3.95). However, trends in ORs with increasing plasma equol values or equol:daidzein ratios were not observed (P>.05). The results of this study do not provide evidence that equol plays a role in the etiology of these breast conditions. However, further work is needed to confirm or refute this conclusion.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2002

Randomized Trial of Breast Self-Examination in Shanghai: Final Results

David B. Thomas; Dao Li Gao; Roberta M. Ray; Wen wan Wang; Charlene J. Allison; Fan liang Chen; Peggy L. Porter; Yong Wei Hu; Guan lin Zhao; Lei da Pan; Wenjin Li; Chunyuan Wu; Zakia Coriaty; Ilonka Evans; Ming Gang Lin; Helge Stalsberg; Steven G. Self


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 1999

Breast tumor characteristics as predictors of mammographic detection: comparison of interval- and screen-detected cancers.

Peggy L. Porter; Amira Y. El-Bastawissi; Margaret T. Mandelson; Ming Gang Lin; Najma Khalid; Elizabeth A. Watney; Laura Cousens; Donna L. White; Stephen H. Taplin; Emily White


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2006

p27Kip1 and Cyclin E Expression and Breast Cancer Survival After Treatment With Adjuvant Chemotherapy

Peggy L. Porter; William E. Barlow; I-Tien Yeh; Ming Gang Lin; Xiaopu P. Yuan; Elizabeth Donato; George W. Sledge; Charles L. Shapiro; James N. Ingle; Charles M. Haskell; Kathy S. Albain; James M. Roberts; Robert B. Livingston; Daniel F. Hayes

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Peggy L. Porter

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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David B. Thomas

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Roberta M. Ray

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Wenjin Li

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Chunyuan Wu

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Johanna W. Lampe

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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