FGFR1 amplification in breast carcinomas: a chromogenic in situ hybridisation analysis

Background The amplicon on 8p11.2 is reported to be found in up to 10% of breast carcinomas. It has been demonstrated recently that this amplicon has four separate cores. The second core encompasses important oncogene candidates, including the fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) gene. Recent studies have demonstrated that specific FGFR1 amplification correlates with gene expression and that FGFR1 activity is required for the survival of a FGFR1 amplified breast cancer cell line. Methods FGFR1 amplification was analysed in tissue microarrays comprising a cohort of 880 unselected breast tumours by means of chromogenic in situ hybridisation using inhouse-generated FGFR1-specific probes. Chromogenic in situ hybridisation signals were counted in a minimum 30 morphologically unequivocal neoplastic cells. Amplification was defined as >5 signals per nucleus in more than 50% of cancer cells or when large gene copy clusters were seen. Results FGFR1 amplification was observed in 8.7% of the tumours and was significantly more prevalent in patients >50 years of age and in tumours that lacked HER2 expression. No association was found with other histological parameters. Survival analysis revealed FGFR1 amplification as an independent prognostic factor for overall survival in the whole cohort. Subgroup analysis demonstrated that the independent prognostic impact of FGFR1 amplification was only seen in patients with oestrogen-receptor-positive tumours, where FGFR1 amplification was the strongest independent predictor of poor outcome. Conclusion Given that up to 8.7% of all breast cancers harbour FGFR1 amplification and that this amplification is an independent predictor of overall survival, further studies analysing the FGFR1 as a potential therapeutic target for breast cancer patients are warranted.

FGFR1 gene encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor that is part of the fibroblast growth factor and growth factor receptors family [10][11][12]. FGFR1 expression has been shown to play pivotal roles in mammary development and breast cancer tumourigenesis [12,13]. Activation of FGFR1 in a transgenic mouse model resulted in increased luminal cell proliferation, activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase and Akt, lateral budding and, eventually, alveolar hyperplasia and invasive lesions [11,12]. In addition, we have recently demonstrated that when core 2 of the 8p11.2-p12 is amplified, the FGFR1 gene shows increased levels of mRNA and protein expression [14]. Furthermore, we have also determined in vitro that FGFR1 signalling is paramount for the survival of a FGFR1 amplified breast cancer cell line [14].
The prognostic impact of FGFR1 amplification in breast cancer still remains unclear. In previous studies analysing FGFR1 amplification by means of Southern blot or fluorescent in situ hybridisation, conflicting results were observed: while FGFR1 amplification proved to be associated with positivity for oestrogen receptor (ER) in one study [1], Prentice and colleagues found no association between FGFR1 amplification and clinicopathological parameters or patients' survival [4]. More recently, using probes for both RAB11FIP1 and FGFR1, Letessier and colleagues [15] demonstrated that cases with 8p12 amplification have a significantly shorter metastasis-free survival [15].
Chromogenic in situ hybridisation (CISH) is a technique that allows for a concurrent analysis of the gene copy number and morphological features of the cells [16][17][18][19][20][21]. Although results obtained with CISH show an excellent concordance with those obtained with fluorescent in situ hybridisation [21], CISH has proven useful for high-throughput copy number assessment, given that it can be easily applied to tissue microarrays and the analysis can be performed with a conventional light microscope [16][17][18][19][20][21]. No studies analysing FGFR1 amplification, as defined by CISH, in a large cohort of breast cancer patients have so far been performed. Using a previously described method [18], inhouse probes specific for FGFR1 were generated and we set out to characterise the prevalence of FGFR1 amplification in a large community-based cohort of breast cancers and its correlations with traditional clinicopathological features, immunohistochemical markers, and disease-free and overall survival.

Tissue microarrays
The tissue microarrays comprised a cohort of 880 unselected breast tumours from patients presenting between 1986 and 1998 entered into the Nottingham Tenovus Primary Breast Carcinoma Series (447 invasive ductal carcinomas of no special type, 183 tubular mixed carcinomas, 25 medullary carcinomas, 84 lobular carcinomas, 28 tubular carcinomas, eight mucinous carcinomas, six cribriform carcinomas, four papillary carcinomas, 29 mixed no special type and lobular carcinomas, 23 mixed no special type and special-type carcinomas, and six miscellaneous tumours -histological type not available in 37 cases). Patient management was based on tumour characteristics by the Nottingham Prognostic Index (NPI) and hormone receptor status. Patients with an NPI score ≤3.4 received no adjuvant therapy, and those with a NPI score >3.4 received tamoxifen if they were ER-positive (± Zoladex if premenopausal) or received classical cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil if they were ER-negative and fit enough to tolerate chemotherapy [22]. Full details of the characterisation of the tissue microarray and the cohort of patients are summarised in Table 1. Tumours were graded according to a modified Bloom-Richardson scoring system [23] and size was categorised according to the TNM staging criteria [24]. The NPI was calculated as previously described [25].
Survival data including the survival time and the disease-free interval were maintained on a prospective basis. Disease-free survival was defined as the interval (in months) from the date of the primary surgical treatment to the first locoregional (including invasive malignancy and ductal carcinoma in situ) or distant recurrence. Overall survival was taken as the time (in months) from the date of the primary surgical treatment to the time of death from breast cancer. The immunohistochemical methods and the results on ER, progesterone receptor, cytokeratin (CK) 7/8, CK 18, CK 19, CK 5/6, CK 14, HER2 and epidermal growth factor receptor have been previously described [26,27].
This study was approved by the Nottingham Research Ethics Committee 2 under the title 'Development of a molecular genetic classification of breast cancer'.
Chromogenic in situ hybridisation CISH for FGFR1 gene amplification was performed on 2-μmthick tissue microarray sections mounted on polylysine-coated slides, using an inhouse-generated probe as previously described [18]. This probe comprises three bacterial artificial chromosome contigs (RP11-350N15, RP11-148D21 and RP11-359P11), which map to the region 38.3-38.6 Mb on chromosome 8p12-p11.23 and encompasses the FGFR1 and part of WHSC1L1. Heat pretreatment of deparaffinised sections consisted of incubation for 15 minutes at 98°C in CISH pretreatment buffer (SPOT-light tissue pretreatment kit; Zymed (South San Francisco, CA, USA) and digestion with pepsin for 5.5 minutes at room temperature according to the manufacturer's instructions. Slides were hybridised and developed as previously described. An appropriate FGFR1 geneamplified breast carcinoma control was included in the slide run. CISH experiments were analysed by two of the authors (SEE and ARG) on a multiheaded microscope. Only unequivocal signals were counted. Signals were evaluated at 400 × magnification and 630 × magnification, and 30 morphologically unequivocal neoplastic cells in each core were assessed for the presence of the FGFR1 gene signals. Amplification was defined as those cases where >50% of the neoplastic cells harboured either >5 copies of the gene or large gene clusters. CISH analysis was performed with observers blinded to clinicopathological parameters, patients' survival and results of the immunohistochemical analysis.

Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 13.0 statistical software (SPSS INC., Chicago, IL, USA). Median follow-up was defined as the median follow-up for those patients still alive and disease free at the latest hospital visit. Cutoff values for the different biomarkers included in this study were chosen before statistical analysis. Standard cutoff values were used for established prognostic factors and were the same as for previously published patient series [27]. All factors were used as dichotomous covariates in the statistical analysis with the exception of grade and the NPI, which were categorised into three groups.
The associations between the FGFR1 amplification and clinicopathological parameters were evaluated by the chi-square test. Confidence intervals of 95% were adopted. A two-sided P value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Survival curves were calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method. Differences in survival on the basis of FGFR1 amplification were estimated using the log-rank test. Multivariate Cox regression analysis was used to evaluate any independent prognostic effect of the variable on disease-free survival and the overall survival, which was adjusted by such well-known prognostic factors as tumour grade, lymph node stage, tumour size, and ER status.

Results
After excluding the uninformative tissue microarray cores, results on FGFR1 amplification were available for 496 tumours. Forty-three tumours (8.7%) showed either >5 signals or large gene clusters in >50% of neoplastic cells (Figure 1).
Complete clinical follow-up information was available for 478 patients for whom FGFR1 CISH results were optimal. The median follow-up period was 58 months (range 1-192 months  Table 2 summarises the associations between FGFR1 gene amplification and key prognostic and outcome parameters. In brief, patients with positive FGFR1 amplification were significantly more likely to be older than 50 years of age (P < 0.05) and to develop distant metastasis (P < 0.05). FGFR1 amplification showed an inverse correlation with HER2 overexpres-sion. A trend for lack of progesterone receptor expression and negativity for basal markers, as defined by Abd El-Rehim and colleagues [27], was also observed. No associations were found between FGFR1 amplification and the grade, lymphnode stage, NPI, expression of ER, low-molecular-weight cytokeratins (CK 7/8, CK 8 and CK 19) or high-molecularweight cytokeratins (CK 5/6 and CK 14) or basal-like phenotype as defined by Nielsen and colleagues [28] (that is, ERnegative and HER2-negative, CK 5/6 and/or epidermal growth factor receptor-positive).
Kaplan-Meier survival analysis revealed an association between FGFR1 amplification and a shorter overall survival (P = 0.01, log-rank test) (Figure 2a). A trend for a shorter disease-free survival and FGFR1 amplification was found (P < 0.07, log-rank test) (Figure 2b). On multivariate Cox hazard analysis adjusted for tumour grade, size and lymph node status, for ER status, and for FGFR1 amplification, it was found that the FGFR1 amplification was a significant predictor of poor overall survival independent of the other known prognostic parameters (P < 0.04) ( Table 3).
Subgroup analysis revealed that FGFR1 amplification was an independent prognostic factor for disease-free survival and overall survival only in ER-positive tumours (Figure 2c,d and Table 4). The association between FGFR1 amplification and poor outcome was maintained in the group of patients that received endocrine therapy (Figure 2e,f). FGFR1 amplification in ER-positive disease was the strongest independent risk factor for poor disease-free survival and overall survival, with a greater hazard ratio than high histological grade. Patients with FGFR1 amplification in the ER-positive group were significantly more likely to develop distant metastases and were associated with a lack of progesterone receptor expression (P < 0.05) ( Table 5). In the cohort of ER-positive tumours, no further associations between FGFR1 amplification and other clinicopathological parameters were found. No associations were seen between FGFR1 amplification and survival of patients with ER-negative breast cancers.

Discussion
In recent years it has been demonstrated that CISH is a useful technique to determine gene copy numbers and gene amplification on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections [16][17][18][19][20][21]. Unlike fluorescent in situ hybridisation, CISH allows a direct comparison between morphological features of neoplastic cells and the presence of gene amplification [16][17][18][19][20][21]. Furthermore, CISH analysis is relatively quick; in the present study, the whole analysis of FGFR1 amplification in a cohort of 880 patients took 2 weeks and, although only one tissue microarray core per tumour was analysed, 56% cases rendered optimal results.
We demonstrate in the present study that FGFR1 amplification is found in 8.7% of breast cancers, which is in agreement

Correlation between FGFR1 gene amplification and the clinicopathological variables
with previous studies [1][2][3][4]29]. Unlike previous studies where FGFR1 amplification was determined by Southern blot analysis [1], our results and those obtained with other in situ methods [3,4,15] did not show any correlation between FGFR1 amplification and low histological grade or positivity for ER. On the other hand, our results demonstrate that FGFR1 amplification is an independent predictor of poor outcome, especially for patients with ER-positive breast cancers. Interestingly, the impact of FGFR1 amplification was stronger on overall survival than disease-free survival (that is, higher hazard ratios on multivariate analysis). This may stem from the fact that locoregional recurrences were included as events for disease-free survival analysis, and that overall survival considered only breast-cancer-related deaths as events. Alternatively, this may reflect the association between FGFR1 amplification and the development of distant metastasis (P = 0.05) or a shorter survival after the first distant recurrence event.
Our group [14] and others [3] have demonstrated that when FGFR1 is specifically amplified (that is, amplification of core A2 of the 8p11.2-p12 amplicon) it is also overexpressed, and that FGFR1 signalling is important for the survival of a cell line that harbours FGFR1 amplification and high-level gene expression [14,30]. Taken together, these results suggest that, in a significant proportion of cases with core A2 amplification, FGFR1 may be the actual amplicon driver [6]. We could not correlate FGFR1 amplification with expression in this study, as it was not possible to optimise antibodies for FGFR1 immunohistochemical analysis on tissue microarrays due to the highly fixation-dependent nature of the commercially available antibodies (data not shown).
The FGFR1 gene encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor that has been shown to play an important role in mammary gland development [12,13,31]. Previous studies have shown in vitro and in vivo that FGFR1 overexpression has oncogenic properties [10,[12][13][14]31]. Furthermore, FGFR1 has been implicated in the tumourigenesis of haematological malignancies, where it is frequently involved in balanced chromosomal translocations, including cases of chronic myeloid leukaemia (BCR-FGFR1 fusion) and the 8p11 myeloproliferative syndrome/stem cell leukaemia-lymphoma syndrome, which is characterised by myeloid hyperplasia and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with chromosomal translocations fusing several genes, the most common being a fusion between ZNF198 and FGFR1 [32]. In preclinical models, the PKC412 tyrosine kinase inhibitor has been shown to successfully inhibit the growth of proliferation of ZNF198-FGFR1-transformed Ba/F3 cells and to prolong the survival of animals with a ZNF198-FGFR1-induced stem cell leukaemia-lymphoma syndrome [33]. Targeting FGFR1 signalling with RNA interference or with the SU5402 FGFR1 tyrosine kinase inhibitor has been shown to decrease cell survival in a breast cancer cell line with FGFR1 amplification [14].

Conclusion
Taken together, our results demonstrate that FGFR1 amplification is found in 8.7% of breast cancers and is an independent predictor of outcome. Although large studies correlating FGFR1 amplification with mRNA and protein expression are    Correlation between FGFR1 gene amplification and the clinicopathological variables in the oestrogen-receptor-positive group still needed, the functional data demonstrating that FGFR1 signalling is required for the survival of breast cancer cells harbouring FGFR1 amplification [14], the relatively high prevalence of FGFR1 amplification in breast cancer and the independent prognostic information provided by FGFR1 amplification status support the idea that this gene may be a useful therapeutic target for a subgroup of breast cancer patients with FGFR1 gene amplification [14].