Cancer as a Disease – Breast Cancer Flashcards
What is special about the breast as an organ?
It is the only organ that develops after birth
Where do the vast majority of breast cancers originate?
In the luminal epithelium of the breast (> 90%)
Describe the two layers of epithelial cells in the mammary gland.
Luminal epithelium- these line the lumen
Myoepithelium- just behind luminal cells making contact with basement membrane-can be vacuolated
What is found between the tubules?
Fatty stromal cells
What is special about the myoepithelial cells?
They have a contractile phenotype
Where are oestrogen receptors expressed in the breast?
They are ONLY expressed by luminal cells
But not all luminal cells express oestrogen receptors (only about 10-15%
Describe the response to oestrogen in a normal breast.
The response to oestrogen is to stimulate growth
The cell that express oestrogen receptors do NOT grow in response to oestrogen
They act as a beacon and produce growth factors the stimulate the growth of nearby cells
How is this response different in breast cancer?
The cells displaying oestrogen receptors directly respond to oestrogen as a growth factor and stimulate their own growth
What is the difference between lobular and medullary carcinoma?
Lobular – the tumour has some resemblance of the architecture of the gland (there are tubules of some form)
Medullary – the tumour cells don’t look anything like the epithelial cells from the mammary gland
What specific type of breast cancer accounts for almost 80% of breast cancers?
Infiltrating ductal carcinoma
What percentage of breast cancers is ER positive?
80%
State some risk factors for breast cancer.
Early age of onset of menstruation Late age to menopause Age to first full-time pregnancy Some contraceptive pills Some HRT
Where is the oestrogen receptor normally located?
It is a cytosolic receptor
It is found in the cytosol bound to a heatshock protein
What happens when oestrogen binds to ER?
The oestrogen binds to ER causing the heat shock protein to dissociate leading to dimerisation of that receptor and another ER which translocates to the nucleus (with oestrogen bound)
The dimer then binds to response elements in the DNA sequence and regulates transcription
What are the most important target genes for the ER transcription factor?
Progesterone receptor
Cyclin D1
c-myc
TGF-alpha
Why does high dose therapy with synthetic oestrogens cause breast tumour regression in post-menopausal women with breast cancer?
High-dose therapy overstimulates the hormonal system leading to downregulation of ER so the cells are no longer responsive to oestrogen
How does the presence of ER affect prognosis
GOOD prognosis in women
Worse prognosis in male breast cancer