Cancer 12 - Breast cancer Flashcards
Breast cancer is the leading female cancer. How come the mortality rate has decreased in breast cancer
- Early diagnosis
- Chemo/radiotherapies
- Hormonal therapies
What is the only organ that develops post natally.
Breast.
It develops into fatty and glandular structures in puberty to produce milk for neonates.
Any part of breast/mammary gland can give rise to tumours
Majority of breast cancers arise from ductal epithelial tissue
There are 2 layers of epithelial cells that surround breast lumen. Describe them
- Inner epithelial layer - luminal epithelial cells - have receptors that respond to hormone therapy - 90% of breast cancers occur here
- Myoepithelial cells - occur more deep - contact basement membrane - they contract and push substances out of the luminal cells into lumen.
NB - there are fatty stromal cells between tubules
Describe the progression of normal breast to malignant breast cancer
- Benign/carcinoma in situ - luminal cells proliferate but my-epithelium not breached - precancerous state.
Subsequent cancer can be crudely divided as:
- Lobular carcinoma - tumour cells adopt tubular like arrangement - no myoepithelial cells present anymore. Cells behave relatively normal
Or
- Medullary carcinoma - tumour cells have hormones/peptides. Look neuroendocrine in origin
or
- Infiltrating/invasive ductal carcinoma (IDC) - they have no special histological structure. Immunohistochemical staining (antibodies) against Human Oestrogen receptor (ER) is informative
Can classify tumours based on degrees of ER expression
80-90% of breast cancers are Oestrogen receptor positive, meaning
They grow in response to oestrogen
The oestrogen receptor is cytosolic and ligand activated transcription factor. How does it work
- Oestrogen is lipophilic - passes through cell membrane and binds ER (displaces HSP)
- 2x activated ERs dimerise –> enters nucleus (oestrogen bound) –> locates specific DNA sequences (oestrogen response elements)
- Oestrogen induced gene products increase cell proliferation –> resulting in breast cancer
Name 4 important oestrogen regulated genes
- Progesterone receptor - if you find PR activity, shows that ER activated
- Cyclin D1
- C-myc (apoptosis regulation)
- TGF-a (growth factor)
Why is dimerisation of the ERs important
The response element is present in 2 halves –> each half of the dimer will bind to half of response element
1/3 of PREMENOPAUSAL women respond to which treatment?
Oophorectomy - remove main source of oestrogen
Paradoxically, giving High-dose oestrogen seems to cause breast tumour regression in post-menopausal women - why
If overstimulate tumour –> ER down regulated –> no longer as responsive to oestrogen
Cons - poor tolerance –> eventual resistance and metastasis
ER is over expressed in most breast cancers, and the presence of ER is indicative of a better prognosis. Increased ER indicates a worse prognosis in?
Men
What are the major treatment approaches to breast cancer
- Surgery
- Radiation therapy
- Chemotherapy
- Endocrine therapy - can be adjuvant therapy if after surgery, or non-adjuvant if before surgery to shrink size of tumour
The basis for endocrine therapy of breast cancer is inhibiting oestrogen action in the breast. How
- Ovarian suppression
- Blocking oestrogen production by enzymatic inhibition
- Inhibiting oestrogen responses
Aside from the ovaries, where else is oestrogen made?
In the adrenal glands –> from androgens via aromatase
i.e. inhibit aromatase –> prevent conversion of androgens into oestrogens
Ovarian ablation therapy aims to eliminate the ovaries (major source of oestrogen production in pre-menopausal women). How
- Surgical oophorectomy
- Ovarian irradiation
But these had major problems - morbidity and irreversibility.
SO, “medical ovarian ablation” developed - more pharmaceutical –> LHRH AGONIST
LHRH agonist binds to LHRH receptor in pituitary gland —> leads to receptor downregulation and suppression of LH release and inhibition of ovarian function –> minimal oestrogen production.
Benefit is that LHRH agonist is reversible and controllable through pregnancy.
e.g. LHRH agents = goserelin, Mbuserelin, leuprolide, triptorelin