Flow Cytometric DNA Index and S-Phase Fraction in Breast Cancer in Relation to Other Prognostic Variables and to Clinical Outcome

Authors

  • MÅRten Fernö Department of Oncology, University Hospital, S-221 85, Lund, Sweden
  • Bo Baldetorp Department of Oncology, University Hospital, S-221 85, Lund, Sweden
  • ÅKe Borg Department of Oncology, University Hospital, S-221 85, Lund, Sweden
  • HÅKan Olsson Department of Oncology, University Hospital, S-221 85, Lund, Sweden
  • Helgi Sigurdsson Department of Oncology, University Hospital, S-221 85, Lund, Sweden
  • Dick Killander Department of Oncology, University Hospital, S-221 85, Lund, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869209088897

Keywords:

Breast cancer, flow cytometry, DNA-index, ploidy, S-phase, interphase, proliferation, prognosis

Abstract

One frequently used classification of flow cytometric DNA ploidy status (diploid versus nondiploid) was compared with a division into seven ploidy classes based on DNA index (DI) and number of cell populations (hypodiploid, diploid, near-hyperdiploid, hyperdiploid, tetraploid, hypertetraploid, and multiploid). The latter ploidy classification showed a better correlation with prognosis and other prognostic factors (i.e., lymph node involvement, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, and S-phase fraction). The improvement in correlation was mainly due to the identification of near-hyperdiploid cases (DI 1.00–1.14) which could be combined with the diploid cases to form a group with favourable prognosis. In contrast to cases with a small increase in DNA content (near-hyperdiploid), those with a small decrease of DNA content (hypodiploid) manifested a more aggressive disease. In multivariate analysis, S-phase fraction (SPF) was a more important prognostic factor than both the improved or the conventional ploidy classification.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

1992-01-01

How to Cite

Fernö, M., Baldetorp, B., Borg, ÅKe, Olsson, H., Sigurdsson, H., & Killander, D. (1992). Flow Cytometric DNA Index and S-Phase Fraction in Breast Cancer in Relation to Other Prognostic Variables and to Clinical Outcome. Acta Oncologica, 31(2), 157–165. https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869209088897