AbstrAct:Laboratory models show that the beta-blocker, propranolol, can inhibit norepinephrine-induced breast cancer cell migration. We hypothesised that breast cancer patients receiving beta-blockers for hypertension would show reduced metastasis and improved clinical outcome. Three patient subgroups were identified from the medical records of 466 consecutive female patients (median age 57, range 28-71) with operable breast cancer and follow-up (>10 years). Two subgroups comprised 43 and 49 hypertensive patients treated with beta-blockers or other antihypertensives respectively, prior to cancer diagnosis. 374 patients formed a nonhypertensive control group. Metastasis development, disease free interval, tumour recurrence and hazards risk were statistically compared between groups. KaplanMeier plots were used to model survival and DM. Beta-blocker treated patients showed a significant reduction in metastasis development (p=0.026), tumour recurrence (p=0.001), and longer disease free interval (p=0.01). In addition, there was a 57% reduced risk of metastasis (Hazards ratio=0.430; 95% CI=0.200-0.926, p=0.031), and a 71% reduction in breast cancer mortality after 10 years (Hazards ratio=0.291; 95% CI=0.119-0.715, p=0.007). This proof-of-principle study showed beta-blocker therapy significantly reduces distant metastases, cancer recurrence, and cancer-specific mortality in breast cancer patients suggesting a novel role for beta-blocker therapy. A larger epidemiological study leading to randomised clinical trials is needed for breast and other cancer types including colon, prostate and ovary.
International audienceTransferrin receptor (CD71) is involved in the cellular uptake of iron and is expressed on cells with high proliferation. It may be implicated in promoting the growth of endocrine resistant phenotypes within ER+/luminal-like breast cancer. We used a panel of in vitro cell models of acquired resistance to tamoxifen (TAMR), Faslodex (FASR) or severe oestrogen deprivation (MCF-7X) and the ER+ luminal MCF-7 parental line to determine CD71 mRNA expression and to study transferrin (Tf) effects on in vitro tumour growth and its inhibition. Furthermore, CD71 protein expression was assessed in a well-characterized series of patients with invasive breast carcinoma using tissue microarrays. Our results demonstrated a striking elevation of CD71 in all cell models of acquired resistance. Exogenous Tf significantly promoted growth in MCF-7-X and MCF-7 cells but more so in MCF-7-X; this growth was significantly reduced by Faslodex (FAS) or a phosphoinositide-3 kinase inhibitor (LY294002). Increased CD71 expression was associated with poor NPI score, tumour proliferation, basal CKs, p53, EGFR, HER2, steroid receptor negativity and shortened breast cancer specific survival ( < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, CD71 was found to be an independent prognostic factor in the ER+ cohort of patients. In conclusion, therapies of current interest in breast cancer (e.g. FAS, PI3K-inhibitors) appear able to partially impact on transferrin/CD71-promoted growth, but further investigation of this important mitogenic mechanism may assist in designing new therapeutic strategies to target highly proliferative, endocrine resistant breast cancers. CD71 appears to be a candidate marker of a subgroup of ER+/luminal-like breast cancer characterised by poor outcome and resistance to tamoxifen
International audienceThe transcription functions of oestrogen receptors (ER) are influenced by several coregulators such as PELP1 (proline, glutamate and leucine rich protein 1). The aim of the present study, which uses tissue microarrays and immunohistochemistry, is to explore the clinical and biological relevance of PELP1 protein expression in a large series of consecutive patients (1,162 patients) with invasive breast cancers with particular emphasis on its role in the ER-positive/luminal-like class of tumours. Our results showed that increased PELP1 expression is associated with tumours of larger size, higher histological grade, higher mitotic count, and with positive expression of basal cytokeratins (CK) (CK14; = 0.018 and CK5/6; = 0.029), -cadherin ( = 0.002), p53 and MIB1 ( = 0.018). There was an inverse association between PELP1 expression and ER ( = 0.002), progesterone (PgR) ( = 0.004), androgen (AR) receptor ( < 0.001), and luminal CK (CK18; = 0.027) expression. A significant association between PELP1 expression and shorter breast cancer specific survival (BCSS) ( = 0.002) and disease-free survival (DFI) ( = 0.006) was found. Multivariate Cox hazard analysis showed that PELP1 expression was an independent predictor of shorter BCSS (Hazard ratio (HR) = 1.349, = 0.006) and shorter DFI (HR = 1.255, = 0.011). In the ER-positive/luminal-like group ( = 768), PELP1 expression showed similar association with other clinicopathological variables and was an independent predictor of shorter DFI (HR = 1.256, = 0.036). In conclusion, PELP1 protein expression is an independent prognostic predictor of shorter BCSS and DFI in breast cancer and its elevated expression is positively associated with markers of poor outcome. PELP1 appears to have a potential application in assessing the clinical outcome of patients with ER-positive breast cancer
Breast cancer mortality is frequently associated with metastatic disease. Metastasis models have shown adrenoceptor (AR) stimulation induces cell migration which is inhibited by adrenoceptor antagonist drugs. We investigated adrenoceptor protein expression in clinical breast tumours and its association with disease progression and prognosis. Immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays was used to characterise α1b, α2c and β(2)2 adrenoceptor protein expression in operable breast tumours. Associations with tumour-relevant biological markers and clinical outcome were statistically assessed. Strong α1b expression occurred in large high grade (P < 0.0001), HER2+ (P < 0.0001) or basal-like (CK5/6, P = 0.0005; CK14, P = 0.0001; EGFR, P = 0.003) cancers, showing increased proliferation (Mib1, P = 0.002), decreased apoptosis (Bcl2, P < 0.0001) and poor NPI membership (P = 0.001). α1b expression correlated with poor cancer-specific survival (LR = 7.628, P = 0.022) and tumour recurrence (LR = 6.128, P = 0.047). Strong α2c was over-expressed in high grade (P = 0.007), HER3+ (P = 0.002) and HER4+ (P < 0.0001) cancers with borderline increase in EGFR, p53 and MIB1 proteins, and inverse association with hormonal (PgR, P = 0.002) phenotype. In contrast, strong β(2) expression occurred in small-size, luminal-like (ER+, P < 0.001) tumours of low grade (P < 0.001) and lymph node stage (P = 0.027) that showed poor prognosis when hormonal treatment was withheld. Adrenoceptors were not found to be independent predictors of clinical outcome. Alpha1b and α2c AR is over-expressed in basal-like breast tumours of poor prognosis. Strong β(2) adrenoceptor expression is seen in patients with a luminal (ER+) tumour phenotype and good prognosis, due to benefits derived from hormonal therapy. These findings suggest a possible role for targeted therapy using adrenoceptor antagonists.
In this study, we investigated the clinical relevance and biological associations of FOXO3a protein expression, using tissue microarrays and immunohistochemistry, in a large series of patients with invasive breast cancer.FOXO3a protein expression showed both nuclear and/or cytoplasmic staining patterns. FOXO3a predominant nuclear expression was positively associated with biomarkers of good prognosis including PgR, FOXA1, and p27 expression. There was an inverse association with mitotic counts, MIB1 growth fraction, C-MYC and PIK3CA expression. With respect to patient outcome, FOXO3a nuclear localisation was associated with longer BC specific survival (p<0.001) and longer distant metastasis free interval (p=0.001), independently of the well-established breast cancer prognostic factors.In conclusion, our results demonstrate the biological and prognostic role of FOXO3a protein expression and its subcellular localization in ER-positive/luminal-like BC possibly through its involvement in controlling cell proliferation.3
Strong RERG expression showed an association with longer breast cancer specific survival and distant metastasis free interval in the whole series as well as in the ER+ luminal group and these associations were independent of other prognostic variablesIn conclusion, we used novel bioinformatics methods to identify candidate genes to characterise ER+ luminal-like breast cancer. RERG gene is a key marker of the luminal BC class and can be used to separate distinct prognostic subgroups.
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