Expression of cytokeratins 17 and 5 identifies a group of breast carcinomas with poor clinical outcome. Author Matt van de Rijn, Charles Perou, Rob Tibshirani, Phillippe Haas, Olli Kallioniemi, Juha Kononen, Joachim Torhorst, Guido Sauter, Markus Zuber, Ossi Köchli, Frank Mross, Holger Dieterich, Rob Seitz, Doug Ross, David Botstein, Pat Brown Publication Year 2002 Type Journal Article Abstract While several prognostic factors have been identified in breast carcinoma, the clinical outcome remains hard to predict for individual patients. Better predictive markers are needed to help guide difficult treatment decisions. In a previous study of 78 breast carcinoma specimens, we noted an association between poor clinical outcome and the expression of cytokeratin 17 and/or cytokeratin 5 mRNAs. Here we describe the results of immunohistochemistry studies using monoclonal antibodies against these markers to analyze more than 600 paraffin-embedded breast tumors in tissue microarrays. We found that expression of cytokeratin 17 and/or cytokeratin 5/6 in tumor cells was associated with a poor clinical outcome. Moreover, multivariate analysis showed that in node-negative breast carcinoma, expression of these cytokeratins was a prognostic factor independent of tumor size and tumor grade. Keywords Animals, Female, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Breast Neoplasms, Treatment Outcome, Prognosis, Breast, Tumor Markers, Biological, Survival Rate, Keratin-5, Keratins, Neoplasm Staging Journal Am J Pathol Volume 161 Issue 6 Pages 1991-6 Date Published 12/2002 Alternate Journal Am. J. Pathol. Google ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML