Abstract

Background

Divergent estrogen receptor (ER) and HER2 status with breast cancer disease progression has important consequences for clinical management and long-term survival.  Molecular subtype expression is dynamic and influenced by therapeutic intervention and the metastatic environment. There remains however, a lack of data regarding the mechanism of subtype switching and subsequent clinical consequences.

Methods

We undertook a clinical study of neoadjuvant HER2 inhibitor treated patients (n=161) to determine the consequence of treatment and metastatic environment on receptor subtype. HER2 status, ER expression levels and global DNA methylation was assessed in pre-treatment biopsies, in post-treatment samples in patients with residual disease and, where relevant, in metastatic tumour samples (total, n = 22).

Results

Overall gains in ER tumour expression were significantly associated with improved disease-free survival (n=72, P < 0.05) post-treatment. Mapping of the methylation landscape revealed global gains in hypomethylation following treatment (n=7 matched tumours, 16 samples) in contrast to hypermethylation on metastasis (n=5 matched tumours, 14 samples). Differential methylation of key signalling pathways, including estrogen response, epithelial to mesenchymal transition and PI3K/AKT/mTOR, is conserved between post-treatment and metastasis. However, where core pathway genes were hypomethylated following treatment, there was a shift to hypermethylation on metastasis, facilitating alterations in the tumour phenotype.

Conclusion

This study unlocks DNA methylation as a key process in breast cancer progression providing vital insights into the effects of targeted HER2 treatment. This work provides a clear rationale to develop combined HER2 inhibitor and endocrine therapeutic strategies to enhance long-term survival in HER2 positive patients.   

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