Clinicogenomic Characterization of Inflammatory Breast Cancer
- PMID: 40378057
- PMCID: PMC12255483
- DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-24-2081
Clinicogenomic Characterization of Inflammatory Breast Cancer
Abstract
Purpose: Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare and clinically distinct form of breast cancer associated with poor outcomes. The biological mechanisms driving IBC remain poorly understood, partly due to limited large-scale genomic studies that directly compare IBC with non-IBC cases.
Experimental design: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 140 patients with IBC (68 primary tumors and 72 metastatic tumors) and 2,317 patients with non-IBC (700 primary tumors, 65 local recurrences, and 1,552 metastases). We compared clinicopathologic features, single-nucleotide variants, copy-number variants, tumor mutational burden, and exploratory survival outcomes between IBC and non-IBC tumors.
Results: The most frequent somatic alterations in IBC were detected in TP53 (72%), ERBB2 (32%), PIK3CA (24%), CCND1 (12%), MYC (9%), FGFR1 (8%), and GATA3 (8%). Multivariate logistic regression revealed a significant enrichment of TP53 single-nucleotide variants in IBC, particularly in HER2+ and hormone receptor-positive disease. Tumor mutational burden did not differ between IBC and non-IBC cases. In HER2+ disease, a pathway analysis revealed an enrichment of NOTCH pathway alterations. TP53, CCND1, and RB1 alterations were associated with poor outcomes in IBC.
Conclusions: This study provides a comprehensive resource of somatic alterations in a large cohort of patients with metastatic IBC and non-IBC, highlighting genomic features associated with worse outcomes. Our findings reveal a significant enrichment of TP53 mutations, reinforcing its critical role in IBC pathogenesis. Few other distinct differences in IBC were observed, suggesting further investigations-beyond bulk sequencing of the somatic genome-are required to better understand the biology driving this aggressive disease.
©2025 American Association for Cancer Research.
Update of
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Clinicogenomic characterization of inflammatory breast cancer.bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2024 May 10:2024.05.07.592972. doi: 10.1101/2024.05.07.592972. bioRxiv. 2024. Update in: Clin Cancer Res. 2025 Jul 15;31(14):3072-3083. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-24-2081. PMID: 38766070 Free PMC article. Updated. Preprint.
References
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- Kertmen N, Babacan T, Keskin O, Solak M, Sarici F, Akin S, et al. Molecular subtypes in patients with inflammatory breast cancer; a single center experience. J BUON 2015;20(1):35–9. - PubMed
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- Dano D, Lardy-Cleaud A, Monneur A, Quenel-Tueux N, Levy C, Mouret-Reynier MA, et al. Metastatic inflammatory breast cancer: survival outcomes and prognostic factors in the national, multicentric, and real-life French cohort (ESME). ESMO Open 2021;6(4):100220 doi 10.1016/j.esmoop.2021.100220. - DOI - PMC - PubMed
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- P50 CA168504/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- Saverin Breast Cancer Research Fund
- Breast Cancer Research Fund
- National Comprehensive Cancer Network/Pfizer
- Pan-Mass Challenge
- Pan-Mass Challenge Team Duncan
- OOFOS Project Pink
- McGuirk Family Fund
- P50 CA168504/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States
- Dana-Farber Inflammatory Breast Cancer Research Fund
- American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
- Conquer Cancer Foundation (CCF)
- Richard K. Lubin Family Foundation through the Lubin Family Foundation Scholar Award
- CTA241185983/Susan G. Komen (SGK)
- 24-40-31-PRIE/ASCO Foundation Young Investigator Award for Translational Cancer Research
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