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Molecular changes in premenopausal oestrogen receptor-positive primary breast cancer in Vietnamese women after oophorectomy

Authors :
Ben P. Haynes
Ophira Ginsburg
Qiong Gao
Elizabeth Folkerd
Maria Afentakis
Le Hong Quang
Pham Thi Han
Pham Hong Khoa
Nguyen Van Dinh
Ta Van To
Mark Clemons
Ian E. Smith
Mitch Dowsett
Source :
NPJ Breast Cancer, npj Breast Cancer, Vol 3, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

For premenopausal women with primary ER + breast cancer, oophorectomy (OvX) is an evidence-based cost-effective option and is standard treatment in many countries. However, there is virtually no data describing the effects of OvX on breast tumour biology. We therefore, characterised the endocrine and genome-wide transcriptional impact of OvX in 56 premenopausal women with ER + breast cancer for 2 weeks prior to mastectomy. Plasma estradiol concentrations decreased from 406 ± 41 to 20.7 ± 2.6 pmol/l (mean ± sem) 24 h after OvX, and to 8.1 ± 0.8 pmol/l 2 weeks later at mastectomy. Ki67 decreased in 33/36 (91.7%) tumours. The expression of 655 genes changed significantly (FDR<br />Genetics: Ovary removal alters gene activity in breast tumours Surgical removal of the ovaries alters the expression of hundreds of genes in the tumour cells of premenopausal women with breast cancer. Ben Haynes from Royal Marsden Hospital in London, UK and colleagues characterised molecular changes in 56 premenopausal women from Vietnam with oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer who underwent oophorectomies, a standard treatment for this patient population. They showed that blood levels of the hormone estradiol dropped precipitously following ovary-removal surgery. Levels of a protein that was indicative of tumour growth also went down, as did genes involved in regulating hormone signalling and cell proliferation. The results are consistent with those seen in postmenopausal women following treatment with an oestrogen-blocking drug, but oophorectomy had a more dramatic effect. The data could aid the search for predictive biomarkers of who stands to benefit most from ovary removal.

Details

ISSN :
23744677
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NPJ breast cancer
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....c72d3ea544d064cd12d23b3bc2f71873