Frontier in Medical & Health Research
FREQUENCY OF ER, PR, AND HER2 POSITIVE CARCINOMA IN OPD SETTING AT JINNAH POSTGRADUATE MEDICAL CENTRE (JPMC), KARACHI
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Keywords

Breast carcinoma, Estrogen receptor, Progesterone receptor, HER2/neu, Molecular subtypes.

How to Cite

FREQUENCY OF ER, PR, AND HER2 POSITIVE CARCINOMA IN OPD SETTING AT JINNAH POSTGRADUATE MEDICAL CENTRE (JPMC), KARACHI. (2025). Frontier in Medical and Health Research, 3(1), 465-470. https://fmhr.net/index.php/fmhr/article/view/2219

Abstract

Objective:
To determine the frequency of estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and HER2/neu positivity and molecular subtypes of breast carcinoma among patients presenting to the outpatient department of a tertiary care public hospital.

Study Design:

Descriptive cross-sectional study.

Place and Duration of Study:

General Surgery Unit, Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (JPMC), Karachi, from July 2024 to December 2024.

Methods:
A sample population of 57 women with a history of breast carcinoma, which was histologically confirmed, was gathered using non-probability consecutive sampling method. Immunohistochemical testing was done to establish the expression of estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR) and HER2/neu. Operation of HER2 overexpression was based on the intensity of 3+ on immunohistochemistry. Based on this, molecular subtypes were given. The statistical tests were conducted with SPSS 25, and frequencies and percentages of receptor status and molecular subtypes were calculated.

Results:
The mean age of patients was 48.6 ± 11.2 years. ER positivity was observed in 43 (75.4%) patients, PR positivity in 40 (70.2%), and HER2 positivity in 18 (31.6%). Luminal A was the most common molecular subtype, found in 27 (47.4%) cases, followed by Luminal B in 11 (19.3%), HER2-enriched in 7 (12.3%), and triple-negative breast cancer in 12 (21.0%) patients.

Conclusion:
The most common phenotype among patients who came to the outpatient department included hormone receptor positive breast cancer most commonly Luminal A subtype. Systematic receptor profiling is unavoidable in the development of proper therapeutic plans, especially when dealing with resource limited settings of the public sector.   

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