Differences in clinicopathologic features and subtype distribution of invasive breast cancer between women older and younger than 40 years

Fujita Med J. 2019;5(4):92-97. doi: 10.20407/fmj.2019-001. Epub 2019 Sep 25.

Abstract

Objectives: We investigated and compared clinicopathologic features and subtype distribution of invasive breast cancer among women <40 and ≥40 years of age.

Methods: We retrospectively compared clinicopathologic characteristics and subtype distribution of invasive breast cancer in women <40 and ≥40 years of age, in a cohort of 1,130 patients. Subtypes included luminal A (positive for hormone receptors [HR]-estrogen receptor [ER] and/or progesterone receptor [PR]-and negative for human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 [HER2] with low Ki67), luminal B (HER2-) (HR+/HER2-/Ki67High), luminal B (HER2+) (HR+/HER2+), HER2-overexpressing (HR-/HER2+), and triple negative (ER-/PR-/HER2-).

Results: Breast cancers in younger women had unfavorable clinicopathologic characteristics, including larger tumors and more frequent node involvement. Subtypes among the 1,130 tumors were luminal A: 36.4%, luminal B (HER2-): 35.0%, luminal B (HER2+): 7.5%, HER2-overexpressing: 7.1%, and triple negative: 14.0%. The age groups significantly differed in subtype distribution (P<0.001). Luminal A subtype was more common in the older group (38.5%) than the younger group (16.2%), and luminal B (HER2-) was more common in the younger group (52.2%) than in the older group (33.2%; P<0.001).

Conclusions: Breast cancers in women younger than 40 years have unfavorable clinicopathologic characteristics and are more likely to be luminal B (HER2-) and less likely to be luminal A than breast cancers in older women.

Keywords: Breast cancer; Clinicopathologic characteristics; Subtype; Young woman.