increases.  An  adequate    dissection  usually contains    at  least   10  lymph   nodes;
however,    because these   tumors  in  25–30%  of  patients    with    negative    nodes
eventually  recur,  other   biologic    prognostic  factors also    are needed.
Tumor   size.   This    correlates  with    the number  of  histologically  involved    lymph
nodes;  however,    it  is  also    an  independent prognostic  factor, particularly    in
node-negative   women.  The use of  size    of  the tumor   as  the most    significant
prognostic  factor  is  problematic because 15% of  patients    with    small   tumors
have    positive    nodal   involvement.
Receptor    status. It  is  standard    practice    to  determine   both    estrogen    and
progesterone    receptor    status  at  the time    of  diagnosis   for definitive  surgical
therapy.    Although    hormone receptor    status  correlates  with    the prognosis,  it
does    so  to  a   lesser  degree  than    nodal   status. Hormone receptor    determination
is, however,    of  critical    importance  as  a   predictive  factor. A   predictive  factor  is
any measurement associated  with    response    or  lack    of  response    of  a   particular
therapy.
Estrogen    receptor    status  has clearly shown   to  be  a   predictive  factor  for
hormone therapy,    either  in  the adjuvant    therapy or  the metastatic  disease
setting.    HER-2   (also   known   as  HER-2.neu   and c-erbB-2)   is  an  epidermal
growth  factor  receptor    on  the surface of  a   cell    that    transmits   growth  signals
to  the cell    nucleus.
Approximately   25–30%  of  breast  cancers overexpress HER-2,  and
overexpression  of  the receptor    is  associated  with    poor    prognosis.  This    may
be  more    of  a   reflection  of  the biologic    correlates  of  HER-2   overexpression,
e.g.,   rapid   tumor   cell    proliferation,  larger  tumor   size,   and loss    of  hormone
receptors,  than    an  independent prognostic  indicator.
DNA ploidy  status. DNA ploidy  status  of  tumors  is  determined  by  flow
cytometry.  It  measures    the average DNA per cell.   Tumors  can be  classified  as
diploid with    normal  DNA content or  aneuploid.  Disease-free    survival    rates   are
