Chalkley Estimates of Angiogenesis in Early Breast Cancer - Relevance to Prognosis

Authors

  • Birgitte V. Offersen From the Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology (B.V. Offersen, M. Yilmaz, J. Overgaard), the Institute of Pathology (F.B. So rensen), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus and the Department of Oncology(A. Knoop), Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark
  • Flemming B. Sørensen From the Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology (B.V. Offersen, M. Yilmaz, J. Overgaard), the Institute of Pathology (F.B. So rensen), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus and the Department of Oncology(A. Knoop), Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark
  • Mette Yilmaz From the Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology (B.V. Offersen, M. Yilmaz, J. Overgaard), the Institute of Pathology (F.B. So rensen), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus and the Department of Oncology(A. Knoop), Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark
  • Ann Knoop From the Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology (B.V. Offersen, M. Yilmaz, J. Overgaard), the Institute of Pathology (F.B. So rensen), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus and the Department of Oncology(A. Knoop), Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark
  • Jens Overgaard From the Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology (B.V. Offersen, M. Yilmaz, J. Overgaard), the Institute of Pathology (F.B. So rensen), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus and the Department of Oncology(A. Knoop), Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/028418602321028337

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate whether Chalkley estimates of angiogenesis add new knowledge regarding prediction of prognosis in 455 consecutive early breast carcinomas, both node-positive (52%) and node-negative (48%). Median follow-up was 101 months. Intense vascularization indicated poor disease-specific (p=0.003) and overall (p=0.004) survival. In node-negative patients, Chalkley counts were not associated with prognosis, whereas in node-positive patients, high Chalkley scores indicated poor disease-specific (p=0.0006) and overall (p=0.0008) survival. A multivariate analysis showed that positive lymph nodes, high histopathological grades, and negative oestrogen receptors were independent markers of cancer-related death. A high histopathological grade was associated with cancer-related death in node-negative patients, whereas in node-positive patients, many lymph nodes, high malignancy grade, negative oestrogen receptor, and increasing Chalkley counts (both tertiles and continuous) were independent markers of disease-specific death. Thus, in a univariate analysis it was found that high Chalkley estimates of angiogenesis indicated a poor prognosis, but high Chalkley estimates were independent prognostic markers only in node-positive patients.

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Published

2002-01-01

How to Cite

Offersen, B. V., Sørensen, F. B., Yilmaz, M., Knoop, A., & Overgaard, J. (2002). Chalkley Estimates of Angiogenesis in Early Breast Cancer - Relevance to Prognosis. Acta Oncologica, 41(7-8), 695–703. https://doi.org/10.1080/028418602321028337