| Literature DB >> 29209143 |
Yi-Sheng Sun1, Zhao Zhao2, Zhang-Nv Yang1, Fang Xu1, Hang-Jing Lu1, Zhi-Yong Zhu1, Wen Shi1, Jianmin Jiang1, Ping-Ping Yao1, Han-Ping Zhu1.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths among women. The development of breast cancer is a multi-step process involving multiple cell types, and its prevention remains challenging in the world. Early diagnosis of breast cancer is one of the best approaches to prevent this disease. In some developed countries, the 5-year relative survival rate of breast cancer patients is above 80% due to early prevention. In the recent decade, great progress has been made in the understanding of breast cancer as well as in the development of preventative methods. The pathogenesis and tumor drug-resistant mechanisms are revealed by discovering breast cancer stem cells, and many genes are found related to breast cancer. Currently, people have more drug options for the chemoprevention of breast cancer, while biological prevention has been recently developed to improve patients' quality of life. In this review, we will summarize key studies of pathogenesis, related genes, risk factors and preventative methods on breast cancer over the past years. These findings represent a small step in the long fight against breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; pathogenesis; prevention.; risk factor
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209143 PMCID: PMC5715522 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.21635
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Figure 1Two hypothetical theories of breast cancer initiation and progression. (A) All subtypes of tumor are derived from the same stem cells or progenitor cells. Different tumor phenotypes are then determined by subtype-specific transforming events. (B) Each tumor subtype is initiated from a single cell type (stem cell, progenitor cell, or differentiated cell). Random mutations can gradually accumulate in any breast cells, leading to their transformation into tumor cells when an adequate number of mutations have accumulated.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of risk factors and preventions of breast cancer. Age, family history, reproductive factors, estrogen and life style are five important risk factors of breast cancer, represented in the pyramid chart. Screening (mammography and MRI), chemoprevention (with SERMs and AIs) and biological prevention (using Herceptin and pertuzumab) are currently being used to prevent breast cancer. PD1/PDL1 inhibitors are immunotherapy drugs and might be promising strategies in treating TNBC.
Additional genes associated with breast cancer
| Gene | Location | Function | Abnormality in Breast cancer | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P53 | 17p13.1 | tumor suppressor gene | Mutations in 30% of breast cancers | |
| NME1 | 17q21.3 | metastasis-suppressor gene | SNP of | |
| RB1 | 13q14.2 | tumor suppressor gene | Rb1 inactivation in 20-35% of breast cancers | |
| PTEN | 10q23.3 | tumor suppressor gene | Loss of PTEN protein expression in up to 33% of breast cancers | |
| ATM | 11q22-q23 | tumor suppressor gene | Mutation of ATM increases the risk of 2- to 3-fold in general, and 5- to 9-fold in women under age 50 | |
| CDH1 | 16q22.1 | tumor suppressor gene | Inactivation of CDH1 in 85% of lobular breast carcinomas | |
| FHIT | 3p14.2 | putative tumor suppressor gene | The rate of FHIT hypermethylation in breast cancer was 8.4-fold higher than that in normal breast tissues | |
| Maspin | 18q21.33 | tumor suppressor gene | Expression of Maspin in 20-80% invasive breast cancer | |
| PIK3CA | 3q26.3 | oncogene | Mutations in 37% of the HR+/HER2- metastatic and 40% of early breast cancer | |
| CCND1 | 11q13 | oncogene | Overexpression in 50% of breast tumors |
Notes: SNP-Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms; HR-Hazard ratio