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Endometrial Cancer

ER/PR Test - Endometrial Cancer Biomarker

The ER/PR test checks whether breast tumor cells have estrogen and progesterone receptors to determine if hormone (endocrine) therapy is likely to work. Knowing receptor status helps avoid ineffective treatments and can reduce the risk of cancer progression and recurrence.

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Key Insights

  • Understand how this test reveals your tumor’s hormone receptor status and what that means for endometrial cancer behavior and care planning.
  • Pinpoint estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) expression in tumor tissue to explain growth patterns, grade, and likelihood of responding to hormonal therapy.
  • Learn how tumor subtype and prior hormone exposure may influence receptor levels and shape your biological results.
  • Use insights to guide personalized strategies with your clinician, including fertility-sparing approaches, endocrine therapy candidacy, and adjuvant treatment choices.
  • Track how receptor status changes over time to understand recurrence biology and adjust your care strategy.
  • Integrate ER/PR with related panels such as mismatch repair (MMR/MSI), p53, POLE, HER2, and proliferation markers for a more complete view of prognosis and treatment options.

What Is an ER/PR Test?

An ER/PR test measures how many cells in an endometrial cancer sample carry estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR). It is performed on human tumor tissue collected during an endometrial biopsy, dilation and curettage, or surgery, and the specimen is processed in paraffin blocks for analysis. Pathology labs use immunohistochemistry, a staining method that tags specific proteins, so the pathologist can see and quantify receptor presence under a microscope. Results are typically reported as the percentage of tumor cell nuclei that stain positive and the intensity of that staining. Some labs also provide a composite score, such as an H-score, and classify results as positive or negative using lab-validated cutoffs.

This test matters because ER and PR are key switches that influence how endometrial cancer cells grow, differentiate, and respond to therapy. High PR, in particular, is often associated with more favorable biology and a greater chance of benefiting from hormonal (endocrine) treatment, while loss of ER or PR can be a sign of more aggressive behavior in certain subtypes. IHC-based receptor testing is a standard part of tumor profiling and helps translate complex cellular signaling into practical insights about prognosis and potential treatment pathways, though thresholds and scoring can vary by laboratory.

Why Is It Important to Test Your ER/PR?

In a healthy uterus, estrogen stimulates the endometrial lining to grow, and progesterone signals it to mature and stabilize. Endometrial cancers borrow these signaling pathways to different degrees. Testing ER and PR tells you whether the tumor is still “listening” to hormones. When receptors are present, cancer cells may rely on hormone-driven growth cues; when receptors are lost, tumors often behave differently and may align with higher-grade or non-endometrioid patterns. Measuring ER/PR helps reveal the biological drivers behind the tumor’s metabolism, cell cycling, and microenvironmental stress, which can link to inflammation, immune activity, and the likelihood of progression.

Clinically, ER/PR status supports prevention-minded decision making and fine-tunes treatment planning. For selected patients who wish to preserve fertility, strong PR expression can support the consideration of conservative, progestin-based management with close monitoring. In recurrent or advanced disease, ER/PR positivity can indicate that endocrine therapy may slow cell cycling by activating progesterone pathways that oppose estrogen-driven proliferation. On the other hand, low or absent PR may prompt earlier focus on non-hormonal options. In short, ER/PR testing does not label a simple pass or fail; it maps where your tumor stands along hormone-driven biology so your care team can match the strategy to the signal.

What Insights Will I Get From an ER/PR Test?

Your report usually displays ER and PR as percentages of tumor cells that stain positive, often paired with an intensity score or a combined index like an H-score. Laboratories apply validated cutoffs to determine whether a result is considered positive. “Normal” population ranges do not apply here because this is a tumor-specific assessment. Instead, you and your clinician interpret results relative to known patterns in endometrial cancer. The same numerical value can mean different things depending on tumor type, grade, and stage, so context is essential.

Lower percentages or complete loss of ER/PR may indicate that the tumor is less dependent on hormones and could be associated with more aggressive patterns in certain histologies. This does not, by itself, define stage or outcome. Rather, it prompts thoughtful integration with other findings. Many teams view ER/PR alongside MMR/MSI status, p53 abnormalities, POLE mutations, HER2 in serous tumors, and proliferation markers to refine prognosis and align the next steps.

The largest value of the ER/PR test is pattern recognition over time. If receptor testing is repeated at recurrence, a shift from positive to negative or vice versa can signal biologic evolution and shape therapeutic planning. Assay limitations exist, including differences in antibody clones, thresholds, and scoring systems across labs, as well as sampling variability within a tumor. That is why interpretation belongs in a clinical context that includes your pathology report, imaging, and overall health goals. Taken together, ER/PR status helps convert microscopic biology into clear, actionable insights for personalized care and long-term outcomes, even as ongoing research continues to sharpen the thresholds and use cases.

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Frequently Asked Questions About

What do ER/PR tests measure?

ER/PR tests measure whether cancer cells express hormone receptors—specifically estrogen receptors (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR)—and often report how many tumor cells show receptor staining and the intensity of that staining; these tests are most commonly performed on breast cancer tissue.

A positive ER and/or PR result indicates the tumor is likely hormone‑driven and more likely to respond to endocrine (hormone) therapies (e.g., tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors), while a negative result suggests hormone therapy is less likely to be effective; receptor status therefore helps guide prognosis and treatment decisions.

How is your ER/PR sample collected?

ER and PR (estrogen and progesterone receptor) testing is performed on tumor tissue obtained during a biopsy or surgery—not from blood or urine. Common collection methods include a core needle biopsy, fine‑needle or excisional biopsy, or the surgical specimen from lumpectomy/mastectomy; the tissue is then fixed in formalin and processed into a paraffin block (FFPE) for laboratory testing.

In the pathology lab the specimen is examined and immunohistochemistry (IHC) is used to detect and quantify ER and PR in the tumor cells; in some cases additional or quantitative assays are performed. If the sample is too small, damaged, or gives unclear results, your care team may recommend a repeat biopsy. Your clinician or pathologist will review the test results and explain what they mean for your care.

What can my ER/PR test results tell me about my cancer risk?

ER (estrogen receptor) and PR (progesterone receptor) test results tell you whether your tumor cells have receptors for those hormones — in other words, whether the cancer is likely hormone‑driven. If a tumor is ER/PR positive, it means the cancer cells may grow in response to estrogen and/or progesterone and are more likely to respond to endocrine (hormone‑blocking) treatments such as tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors; ER/PR‑positive cancers often have more treatment options and, when combined with other favorable factors, can be associated with a better prognosis. If a tumor is ER/PR negative, it is less likely to respond to hormone therapy and oncologists typically consider other treatments (for example chemotherapy or targeted therapies) depending on stage and other markers.

ER/PR test results describe the biology of your current tumor and your personal ER/PR levels — they do not measure your overall future risk of developing cancer, your inherited (genetic) risk, or guarantee outcomes on their own. Other factors (stage, grade, HER2 status, overall health and treatment) also affect prognosis and treatment choices, so use ER/PR results as one important piece of information to discuss with your oncology team when planning care.

How accurate or reliable are ER/PR tests?

ER/PR testing using immunohistochemistry (IHC) is the standard clinical method and is generally highly reliable when performed in accredited laboratories following established guidelines—most results accurately reflect whether a tumor is estrogen- or progesterone-receptor positive and guide treatment decisions.

How often should I test my ER/PR levels?

ER/PR (estrogen- and progesterone-receptor) testing is performed on tumor tissue and is routinely done once at the time of initial breast‑cancer diagnosis to guide treatment decisions; it is not a routine serial blood test you would repeat on a schedule.

Repeat testing is recommended only if it will affect management — for example, when the cancer recurs or spreads (biopsy of a new/metastatic lesion), if a different pathology is suspected, or if the tumor progresses while on hormone therapy and you need to confirm receptor status before changing treatment. Your oncologist will advise when re‑biopsy and retesting are appropriate based on your clinical situation.

Are ER/PR test results diagnostic?

No — ER/PR test results highlight patterns of imbalance or resilience in hormone receptor expression, not medical diagnoses.

They must be interpreted by a qualified clinician alongside symptoms, medical history, imaging/pathology and other lab or biomarker data to determine whether cancer is present and to guide diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment decisions.

How can I improve my ER/PR levels after testing?

ER (estrogen receptor) and PR (progesterone receptor) results describe whether those receptors are present on your tumor cells — they are a property of the cancer tissue, not a general body or “blood” level you can raise with diet, supplements, or lifestyle. You generally cannot “improve” ER/PR positivity by self-care; these markers are determined by pathology of the tumor and sometimes change only after treatment or over time.

What you can do clinically is work with your oncologist on appropriate treatment: ER/PR‑positive cancers are treated with endocrine (hormone) therapies (for example tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors, or ovarian suppression in premenopausal patients) that block hormone-driven tumor growth, and receptor status can occasionally change so retesting (re‑biopsy) may be recommended if circumstances warrant. Discuss retesting, the right systemic therapy, and any clinical-trial options with your treatment team — they will base decisions on the tumor’s receptor status, stage, and overall clinical picture.

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