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Torsten O. Nielsen, MD, PhD, FRCPC, a professor of pathology at the University of British Columbia, discusses the pros and cons of using the Ki67 as a prognostic marker in breast cancer.
Torsten O. Nielsen, MD, PhD, FRCPC, a professor of pathology at the University of British Columbia, discusses the pros and cons of using the Ki67 as a prognostic marker in breast cancer.
Nielsen says there is extensive literature on the clinical validity of Ki67. It is a marker of proliferation that assists in the prognosis of breast cancer and many believe an assay could have a role in the prediction of the disease. Nielsen also notes that testing for Ki67 could be a substitute for a more complex, expensive test.
However, the Ki-67 tumor marker test is not without problems, Nielsen says. There is poor analytical reproducibility with Ki67 scores, especially within the critical 10-20% range.
Although the fundamentals of the assay work well, Nielsen says, the scoring and interpretation of the test are difficult to reproduce.
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