| Literature DB >> 28000774 |
Jiayi Wan1, Yifei Gao2, Ke Zeng1, Yongxiang Yin3, Min Zhao3, Jia Wei4, Qi Chen2,4.
Abstract
The involvement of hormonal factors in developing endometrial cancer is well documented. In particular, excess or unopposed estrogen is a major risk factor. Endometrial cancer is divided into estrogen-dependent and estrogen-independent types. Studies suggested that the subtypes of endometrial cancer share many common risk factors. Whether the levels of sex hormones differ between types 1 and 2 endometrial cancer has not been investigated. In this study, levels of estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were investigated between type 1 and type 2 endometrial cancer taking into account menopausal status and parity. The sex hormones levels and estrogen and progesterone receptors were measured in 187 women with endometrial cancer. The levels of estradiol (E2), progesterone, testosterone, FSH and LH were not different between the subtypes of endometrial cancer regardless of menopausal status. In addition, the sex hormones were not different between patients of different party regardless of the menopausal status. The majority of type 1 (96%) and type 2 (82%) endometrial cancers were estrogen and progesterone receptor positive. Our data suggest that type 2 endometrial cancer is not completely estrogen independent, and type 1 and type 2 endometrial cancers may have a similar pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28000774 PMCID: PMC5175126 DOI: 10.1038/srep39744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Clinical characteristics of the study population.
| Women with type 1 endometrial cancer (N = 163) | Women with type 2 endometrial cancer (N = 24) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis (years, median/range) | 55(24–82) | 56 (35–74) |
| Premenopause (number, %) | 59 (36.2%) | 8 (33.3%) |
| Post- menopause (number, %) | 104 (63.8%) | 16 (66.7%) |
| Parity (number, %) | ||
| 0 | 7 (4.3%) | 1 (4%) |
| 1 | 90 (55.2%) | 15 (63%) |
| 2 | 53 (32.5%) | 7 (29%) |
| ≥3 | 13 (8%) | 1 (4%) |
| BMI (mean ± SD, kg/m2) | 24.32 ± 3.84 | 25.45 ± 3.55 |
The levels of sex hormones in premenopausal and postmenopausal women with type1 or type 2 endometrial cancer.
| E2 (pg/ml) (median/range) | Progesterone (ng/ml) (median/range) | Testosterone (ng/ml) (median/range) | FSH (IU/L) (median/range) | LH (IU/L) (median/range) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 (n = 59) | 52.8 (5–323) | 0.46 (0.08–31.5) | 0.22 (0.02–1.05) | 8.37 (1.34–86.2) | 7.16 (0.62–40.8) |
| Type 2 (n = 8) | 27 (9.6–166) | 0.50 (0.38–0.58) | 0.24 (0.1–0.29) | 16.4 (4–86.1) | 8.7 (3–50.0) |
| P value | P = 0.611 | P = 0.931 | P = 0.988 | P = 0.323 | P = 0.304 |
| Type 1(n = 104) | 15.7 (5–221) | 0.34 (0.03–8.64) | 0.20 (0.02–0.93) | 47.2 (3.4–93.5) | 22.8 (4.1–54.9) |
| Type 2 (n = 16) | 15.6 (5–48.3) | 0.35 (0.16–0.71) | 0.21 (0.05–0.33) | 38.8 (6.6–95.1) | 17.0 (4.3–38.6) |
| P value | P = 0.992 | P = 0.986 | P = 0.531 | P = 0.228 | P = 0.103 |
The number of postmenopausal patients with excess levels of E2, progesterone and testosterone or lower levels of FSH and LH.
| Postmenopause | Excess E2 | Excess Progesterone | Excess Testosterone | Lower FSH | Lower LH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1(n = 104) (number, %) | 15 (14%) | 6 (5.3%) | 1(1%) | 10 (9.5%) | 14 (13.5%) |
| Type 2 (n = 16) (number, %) | 1 (6.2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 3 (18.7%) | 2 (12.5%) |
| P value | P = 0.634 | P = 0.511 | P = 0.896 | P = 0.162 | P = 0.733 |
The number of premenopausal women with excess of E2, progesterone, testosterone, FSH and LH in type 1 and type 2 endometrial cancers.
| Excess reference range (number, %) | P value | |
|---|---|---|
| Type 1 (n = 59) | 12 (20.3%) | 0.672 |
| Type 2 (n = 8) | 1 (12.5%) | |
| Type 1 (n = 59) | 4 (6.8%) | 0.884 |
| Type 2 (n = 8) | 0 (0%) | |
| Type 1 (n = 59) | 1 (1.7%) | 0.419 |
| Type 2 (n = 8) | 0 (0%) | |
| Type 1 (n = 59) | 29 (49.1%) | 0.511 |
| Type 2 (n = 8) | 5 (62.5%) | |
| Type 1 (n = 59) | 21 (35.6%) | 0.903 |
| Type 2 (n = 8) | 3 (37.5%) | |
The association between parity and the levels of sex hormones in premenopausal and postmenopausal patients with endometrial cancers.
| E2 (pg/ml) (median/range) | Progesterone (ng/ml) (median/range) | Testosterone (ng/ml) (median/range) | FSH (IU/L) (median/range) | LH (IU/L) (median/range) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parity | |||||
| 0 (n = 8) | 24.61 (5–178.1) | 0.3375 (0.08–0.693) | 0.177 (0.025–0.547) | 18.26 (5.1–33.84) | 15.96 (2.56–34.67) |
| 1 (n = 51) | 61.42 (5–323.5) | 0.478 (0.158–31.51) | 0.224 (0.025–1.05) | 7.05 (1.39–86.24) | 7.04 (0.62–50.04) |
| 2 (n = 8) | 73.65 (9.6–137.7) | 0.671 (0.134–0.921) | 0.225 (0.11–0.328) | 5.85 (1.34–57.36) | 6.83 (3.97–35.32) |
| P value | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 |
| Parity | |||||
| 1 (n = 54) | 13.95 (5–98.9) | 0.362 (0.05–0.865) | 0.211 (0.025–0.935) | 43.75 (7.32–95.01) | 21.88 (4.13–48.51) |
| 2 (n = 53) | 19.47 (5–221.9) | 0.348 (0.03–8.64) | 0.226 (0.025–0.551) | 46.17 (3.42–93.53) | 22.5 (5.28–54.96) |
| ≥3 (n = 13) | 13.7 (5–48.33) | 0.201 (0.03–0.477) | 0.129 (0.025–0.309) | 58.77 (17.42–90.38) | 25.95 (6.64–51.93) |
| P value | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 | >0.05 |
The positivity of estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) in endometrial cancers.
| ER positive (number, %, lower, upper CL) | PR positive (number, %, lower, upper CL) | |
|---|---|---|
| Type 1 (n = 157) | 151 (96%) (91.8%, 98.5%) | 151 (96%) (91.8%, 98.5%) |
| Type 2 (n = 22) | 18 (82%) (59.7%, 94.8%) | 17 (77%) (54.6%, 92.2%) |
| P value | 0.03 | 0.01 |
*data missing in 6 cases with type 1endometrial cancer, and 2 cases with type 2 endometrial cancer.