|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Genetic Clues May Show
Which Women Face Breast Cancer Risk from HRT Behind the Cancer Headlines® September 15, 2003 A genetic clue may eventually help physicians identify
certain women who would face an increased risk of breast cancer from using
hormone replacement therapy, according to researchers from the Keck School of
Medicine of the Mammographic density is a risk factor for breast cancer and has been proposed as a marker for breast cancer risk. "Our research is promising. We already know that only
some women who use hormone replacement therapy with estrogen and progestin go
on to develop breast cancer," says Giske Ursin, M.D., Ph.D., associate
professor of preventive medicine at the The researchers presented their findings at a meeting called "SNPs, Haplotype, and Cancer: Application in Molecular Epidemiology," sponsored by the American Association for Cancer Research. SNPs is scientific shorthand for single nucleotide polymorphisms, which refer to differences in specific genes within the human genome. Researchers explain that 99.9 percent of the genome is identical in all humans. But the rest of the genome is where it gets interesting—and where SNPs can be found. These polymorphisms are bits of the genetic blueprint that exist in different varieties within the population. They may account for characteristics as obvious as hair color or as complicated as the body's ability to break down hormones. In their study, Scientists checked each participant's DNA for the presence of five genetic polymorphisms associated with progesterone action or the body's ability to break down estrogen or progesterone. Because of the way genes are inherited from both parents, each participant could either have two copies of the polymorphism, one copy or no copies. When researchers took women's mammograms after 12 months on the trial and compared them to mammograms taken at baseline, they saw something striking. They found that among women on estrogen-and-progestin therapy, those with either one or two copies of a polymorphism in one of the genes that break down progesterone had a substantially greater increase in breast density than women who had no copies of that polymorphism. The bodies of women with this genetic variant may not be able to break down progesterone as well as those without the polymorphism, researchers theorize. They did not see the same effects in women using estrogen-only therapy. Among study participants as a whole, those on estrogen-and-progestin therapy saw their breast tissue grow 7 percent denser, while those taking estrogen alone had somewhat less of an increase in breast density. Women on placebo had no increase in breast density. It is not yet known whether an increase in breast density translates into an increase in breast cancer risk. However, breast density may be a measure of breast cell multiplication. Researchers believe the more breast cells multiply over a lifetime, the greater the breast cancer risk. The estrogen and progesterone naturally present in young women cause breast cells to multiply, but as a woman enters menopause, hormone levels plummet and breast cell multiplication slows. Hormone replacement therapy in postmenopausal women
introduces hormones present in very small amounts in such women. That means
additional breast cell multiplication—and potentially greater breast cancer
risk. SOURCE: American Association for Cancer Research (http://www.aacr.org) DISCLAIMER!Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) is a service of Willis-Knighton Cancer Center.The articles in Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) are written by national medical editorsand writers who review current literature and develop timely articles in non-technicallanguage. Sources of information are cited for each article. If you have questions, referto the sources listed or to your physician. Willis-Knighton Cancer Center is notresponsible for content. Articles are updated on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. This information is provided for information only and is not a substitute for informationfrom or care by a physician. |
|
If you have comments, questions or problems with this website, please contact: webmaster@wkhs.com Willis-Knighton Health System. All rights reserved. |
|
| Home | Staff | Equipment | Patient Info | Links/Clinical Trials | Treatments | News Articles | Directions/Map | Center for IMRT |