NF-κB associated markers of prognosis in early and metastatic triple negative breast cancer

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Abstract

Background: Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive subtype of breast cancer. While PD-1 based immunotherapies overall have led to improved treatment outcomes for this disease, a diverse response to frontline chemotherapy and immunotherapy still exist in TNBC, highlighting the need for more robust prognostic markers. Methods: Tumor-intrinsic immunotranscriptomics, serum cytokine profiling, and tumor burden studies were conducted in two syngeneic mouse models to assess differential effects in both the early-stage and metastatic setting. Bioinformatic analyses of both early and metastatic TNBC patient data were performed to assess if identified NF-κB-associated factors are associated with improved patient clinical outcomes. Results: NF-κB signaling driven by lymphotoxin beta expression is associated with tumor regression in TNBC mouse models. Furthermore, lymphotoxin beta expression in patient TNBC cohorts is prognostic of improved survival outcomes. Conclusions: This study highlights the potential role for NF-κB-associated factors, specifically lymphotoxin beta to be used as prognostic markers in TNBC, which could ultimately provide insight for improved targeted treatment approaches in the clinic.

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De La Cruz, P., McAdams, J., Morales Aquino, M., Fernandez, A. I., Elliott, A., Lustberg, M., … James, N. E. (2024). NF-κB associated markers of prognosis in early and metastatic triple negative breast cancer. Breast Cancer Research, 26(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-024-01925-3

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