Understanding How
Estrogen Affects Breast Cancer Spread
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Estrogen can help breast cancer
cells invade the blood stream and spread around the body, according to a new
study by Cancer Research
Dr. Wen Jiang and his team from the University of
Wales College of Medicine in
And they believe designing
treatments to counteract the effect of estrogen and strengthen the blood vessel
wall could stop rogue cancer cells from getting into circulation and reaching
other organs in the body.
Cancer spreads to other parts of
the body when a cell breaks away from the primary tumor and enters a
surrounding blood vessel.
According to Jiang: "We already knew estrogen could help some
breast cancers to develop by stimulating the growth of cells. As a tumor develops, the chance of a
cell breaking away and traveling to another part of the body increases.
But this is the first study to show that estrogen affects the cells which line
our blood vessels."
In the lab, the researchers
created a mini-wall of blood vessel cells. Using a fluorescent chemical they visualized
how much of it leaked from one side of the wall to the other. When they added estrogen
and repeated the experiment, the cells became substantially more
leaky.
They think the hormone makes blood
vessel cells more permeable by stopping structures, called tight junctions,
from working properly. Tight junctions act like glue sealing our cells
together.
To test their theory the team analyzed
the levels of the glue-like structures in blood vessel cells and found they
dropped after estrogen was added.
Scientists believe without this
glue, the links between blood vessel cells are weaker, making it easier for
cancer cells to get through.
At the end of last year, Jiang's team found breast cancer patients with low levels
of the glue are more prone to disease spread.
Jiang says: "It seems that estrogen disrupts these
glue-like structures that lie between the cells in our blood vessels, creating
opportunities for breast cancer to spread to other parts of the body.
"We are currently looking at
ways to boost the levels of tight junctions in patients to see if this can help
halt the rapid spread of the disease."
Professor Robert Souhami, Director of Clinical Research at Cancer Research
"This study has provided us
with valuable clues on how it might be possible to contain the disease in its
early stages and improve the chances of successful treatment."
SOURCES:
Journal of Cellular Physiology, Vol. 196, Issue 2
Cancer Research