| Literature DB >> 32784973 |
María Ángeles Ávila-Gálvez1, Juan Antonio Giménez-Bastida1, Juan Carlos Espín1, Antonio González-Sarrías1.
Abstract
Breast cancer (BC) is the most common malignancy and the leading cause of cancer-related death in adult women worldwide. Over 85% of BC cases are non-hereditary, caused by modifiable extrinsic factors related to lifestyle, including dietary habits, which play a crucial role in cancer prevention. Although many epidemiological and observational studies have inversely correlated the fruit and vegetable consumption with the BC incidence, the involvement of their phenolic content in this correlation remains contradictory. During decades, wrong approaches that did not consider the bioavailability, metabolism, and breast tissue distribution of dietary phenolics persist behind the large currently existing gap between preclinical and clinical research. In the present review, we provide comprehensive preclinical and clinical evidence according to physiologically relevant in vitro and in vivo studies. Some dietary phenolics such as resveratrol (RSV), quercetin, isoflavones, epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), lignans, and curcumin are gaining attention for their chemopreventive properties in preclinical research. However, the clinical evidence of dietary phenolics as BC chemopreventive compounds is still inconclusive. Therefore, the only way to validate promising preclinical results is to conduct clinical trials in BC patients. In this regard, future perspectives on dietary phenolics and BC research are also critically discussed.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; breast cancer; clinical trials; dietary phenolics; in vitro; polyphenols
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32784973 PMCID: PMC7461055 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21165718
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Dietary phenolics and derived metabolites identified in human breast tissues.
| Group and Sample Size | Diet/Compound Administration | Extraction and Analytical Conditions | Identified and(or) Quantified Phenolic Metabolites | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 women undergoing breast biopsy or cancer surgery | Intake of four soy-supplemented bread rolls per day, providing approximately 45 mg of isoflavonoids, for 14 days prior to surgery (n = 4) Placebo group (n = 4). | Breast cancer tissues were extracted and further hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Quantitative analyses were performed by GC/MS using specific standards. | The mean daidzein concentration in non-soy-supplemented patients was 0.021 (range 0.017–0.028) nmol/g compared with 0.145 (range 0.083–0.218) nmol/g in soy-supplemented patients. | [ |
| 3 healthy women undergoing breast reductions | Soy-based food supplement containing 100 mg of genistein/genistin, 37 mg of daidzein/daidzin, and 15 mg of glycitein/glycitin (more than 90% as glycosides (single and triple dose, n = 1 each) or a placebo tablet (n = 1) for 5 days before aesthetic breast surgery. | Breast tissues were extracted and further hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Analyses were performed by HPLC-DAD and the compounds were identified by comparison of the retention time with the respective standards (UV spectra). | Genistein and equol concentrations were 4.16 µg/g and 52.98 µg/g, respectively, after soy-based food supplement (single dose), whereas daidzein was below the limit of detection. | [ |
| 28 volunteers before aesthetic breast surgery | Soy-based food supplement containing 100 mg of genistein/genistin, 37 mg of daidzein/daidzin, and 15 mg of glycitein/glycitin (more than 90% as glycosides, for 5 evenings before aesthetic breast surgery (n = 9). Placebo group (n = 19). | Breast tissues were extracted and further hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Analyses were performed by HPLC-MS and the compounds were quantified using specific standards. | The median daidzein and equol concentrations were 7.03 nmol/L and 2.44 nmol/L, respectively, in soy-supplemented subjects. Genistein was not detectable. | [ |
| 31 healthy women undergoing an aesthetic breast reduction | Soy milk (n = 11; 250 mL containing 16.98 mg genistein and 5.40 mg daidzein (per dose)), soy supplement (n = 10; 5.27 mg genistein and 17.56 mg daidzein aglycone (per dose), or control (n = 10, no soy product). 3 doses of soy milk or soy supplements were taken daily for 5 days before an aesthetic breast reduction. | Breast tissues were dissected into fractions (adipose and glandular tissue) and were both non-hydrolyzed and hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Quantitative analyses were performed by HPLC-MS/MS and the compounds were quantified using specific standards of aglycones, but not conjugated forms. | Total isoflavones showed a breast adipose/glandular tissue distribution of 40:60. In hydrolyzed breast adipose and glandular tissues, total genistein and daidzein concentrations ranged between 92.33–493.8 pmol/g and 22.15–770.8 pmol/g. Total equol and dihydrodaidzein were only detected in few subjects (up to 559.4 pmol/g and up to 368.8 ± 171.1 pmol/g. | [ |
| 21 healthy women undergoing an aesthetic breast reduction | Hop-supplemented group (containing 2.04 mg xanthohumol (XN), 1.20 mg isoxanthohumol (IX), and 0.1 mg 8-prenylnaringenin (8-PN) per supplement) (n = 11) or control group (n = 10). Three supplements were taken daily for 5 days before surgery. | Breast tissues were dissected into fractions (adipose and glandular tissue) and were both non-hydrolyzed and hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Qualitative analyses were performed by HPLC-MS/MS and the compounds were quantified using specific standards for aglycones, but not conjugated forms. | Total prenylflavonoids showed a breast adipose/glandular tissue distribution of 38:62. | [ |
| 12 early breast cancer patients | Orally bioavailable complex of silybin–phosphatidylcholine (2.8 g/day) for 4 weeks prior to surgery. | Breast tissues (tumour and normal) were extracted and further hydrolyzed both with and without enzymatic treatment 1. Qualitative analyses were performed by HPLC-MS/MS and the free and total silybin were quantified using specific standard. | The median total and free silybin concentration in breast cancer tissues were 131 ng/mg (IQR, 35–869) and 33 ng/g (IQR, 4–158), respectively. | [ |
| 12 early breast cancer patients | Patients received 300 mg of a caffeine-free green tea catechin extract, equivalent to 44.9 mg of epigallocatechin-3-O-gallate (EGCG) daily, for 4 weeks prior to surgery. | Breast tissues (tumour and normal) were extracted and further both non-hydrolyzed and hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Quantitative analyses were performed by HPLC-MS/MS and the compounds were quantified as free (unconjugated) EGCG, thereafter through enzymatic hydrolysis as total EGCG (free and conjugated) using EGCG standard. | Total EGCG was detectable in all tumour tissue samples (median total EGCG 3.18 ng/g (IQR, 2.76–4.58)) and higher amount than in adjacent normal tissue (under the limit of detectability, minimum, 0 ng/g; maximum, 2.85 ng/g). | [ |
| 27 breast cancer patients | Breast cancer patients consumed a cocktail of plant extracts (cocoa, pomegranate, lemon, orange, grapeseed, and olive) plus resveratrol, providing 37 different phenolics (473.7 mg), theobromine and caffeine (19.7 mg) (n = 19) from diagnosis to surgical resection (6 ± 2 days). Control group did not consume extracts (n = 8). | Normal and tumour glandular breast tissues were extracted and further both non-hydrolyzed and hydrolyzed by enzymatic treatment 1. Quantitative analyses were performed by UPLC-ESI-QTOF-MS and carried out by peak area integration of their EIC using calibration curves of specific (free and conjugated metabolites) standards. | A total of 39 and 33 metabolites were identified in normal and tumour tissues, respectively. Some representative metabolites detected in tumour tissues (median and range, pmol/g) were urolithin-A-3- | [ |
1 enzymatic treatment was performed using β-glucuronidase/sulfatase enzymes. Abbreviations: DAD, diode array detection; EGCG, epigallocatechin-3-gallate; EIC, extracted ion chromatogram; GC, gas chromatography; HP, Hesperetin; HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography; IQR, interquartile range; MS, mass spectrometry; O-DMA, O-desmethylangolensin; RSV, resveratrol; UPLC-ESI-Q-TOF, ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray ionization quadrupole time-of-flight; UV, ultraviolet.
In vitro studies conducted with relevant phenolic-derived metabolites on breast cancer (BC) models.
| Breast Cellular Model | Compound Assayed | Dose/Duration | Main Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| MCF-7, ZR-75-1, MDA-MB-231 (breast cancer cell lines) and MCF-10A (normal cell line) | RSV, RSV 3-sulph, RSV 4′-sulph, RSV 3,4′-disulph. | 1–350 µM; 48 h | RSV: IC50 = 67.6–82.2 µM against all breast cancer cells; IC50 = 20 µM against MCF-10A. | [ |
| MCF-7 | RSV, RSV 3-sulph, RSV 4′-sulph, RSV 3,5 disulph, RSV 3,4′-disulph, RSV 3,4′,5-trisulph. | 340 µM; 72 h | Cytotoxic effect (only RSV and RSV 3-sulph). | [ |
| RSV, RSV 3-gluc, RSV 3-glur, RSV 3-sulph, RSV 4′-sulph. | 0.05–100 µM; 18–24 h | RSV 3-sulph showed anti-oestrogenic activity at 10 and 50 µM (with a marked preference for ERα at 10–100 µM), and weak oestrogenic activity. | [ | |
| MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 | RSV, RSV 3-glur, RSV 3-sulph, RSV 4′-sulph, DH-RSV, DH-RSV 3-glur. | 10 and 50 µM; 3 and 7 days | ↓Proliferation in MDA-MB-231 cells (only RSV and DH-RSV). | [ |
| MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 and MCF-10A (normal cell line) | RSV, RSV 3-glur, RSV 3-sulph, RSV 4′-sulph, DH-RSV, DH-RSV 3-glur. | 0.5, 1, and 10 µM; | The effects were only observed in MCF-7 cells for all compounds: ↓Clonogenicity; cell cycle arrest; senescence induction; modulation of p53/p21 and p16/Rb pathways. | [ |
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| MCF-7 and normal mammary epithelial cells H184B5F5/M10 | Baicalein, baicalein 7- | 50, 100, and 200 µM; 24 h | Effects in MCF-7 cells: ↓cell viability; ↑LDH release; induction of cell cycle arrest; induction of morphological changes; ↑apoptosis; ↑ROS; ↑caspase-3, -9 activity. Effects on H184B5F5/M10 cells: No cytotoxic. | [ |
| MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 | HP, HP 3′-glur, HP 7-glur, HP 3′-sulph, HP 7-sulph. | 10 and 50 µM; 3 and 7 days | ↓Proliferation in MDA-MB-231 cells (only HP at 50 µM). | [ |
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| MCF-7 | Quer, Quer-3- | 50 µM; 48 h | ↓Cell proliferation (no effect of Quer-3- | [ |
| Quer, rutin, isoquercitrin, Quer 3- | 0.1–100 µM; | Quer 3- | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Quer 3- | 10−10–10−4 M (binding assay) and 0.01–1 µM (cell assay); 1–24 h | Quer 3- | [ |
| MCF-10A (normal cell line) | Quer and Quer 3- | 10−10–10−4 M (binding assay) and 0.05–10 µM (cell assay); 2 h | Quer and Quer 3- | [ |
| MCF-7 and normal mammary epithelial cells H184B5F5/M10 | Quer, Isorhamnetin, and Isorhamnetin 3- | 25, 50, and 100 µM; 24–48 h | Effects in MCF-7 cells: | [ |
| MCF-7 and normal mammary epithelial cells H184B5F5/M10 | Quer, Quer 3- | 25, 50 and 100 µM; 24–48 h | Effects in MCF-7 cells: ↓cell growth; ↑LDH release; ↑ROS; ↑apoptosis; induction of cell cycle arrest; induction of morphological changes. | [ |
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| MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 | Uro-A, Uro-A 3-glur, Uro-A 8-glur, Uro-A 3-sulph, IsoUro-A, IsoUro-A 3-glur, IsoUro-A 9-glur, Uro-B, Uro-B 3-glur, Uro-B 3-sulph. | 10 and 50 µM; 3 and 7 days | ↓Proliferation in MCF-7 (Uro-A and IsoUro-A) and MDA-MB-231 (free forms and conjugates at 50 µM). | [ |
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| MCF-7 | Epi, Epi-3′- | 100 µM; 48 h | ↓Cell proliferation (only 4′- | [ |
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| MCF-7 | GEN, GEN 4′- | 10–1000 µM; 24 h | Low stimulatory MCF-7 growth, β-gal induction, and binding to ERs: sulphates of GEN and glucuronides of glycitein and DH-DAZ. | [ |
| MCF-7 | GEN, GEN 7- | 16 µM; 72 h | ↑Cytotoxicity (only DAZ). | [ |
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| MCF-7 | GEN, GEN 7- | 10−7–10−4 M; 18–24 h (binding and gene expression assay) and 7 or 14 days (proliferation assay) | The sulphation in position 7 reduced the oestrogen capacity of GEN and equol in all assays. | [ |
| HS578T, MDA-MB-231, and MCF-7 | Puerarin, GEN, DAZ, and mix of DAZ glucuronides/sulphates. | 12.5–100 µM (free compounds) and 2.35 µM the mix of DAZ conjugates; 24–72 h | Effect of only with free compounds: | [ |
| MCF-7, T47D, and MCF-10A (normal cell line) | GEN, GEN 7- | 5.12 × 10−3–80 µM for GEN and 2.2–4.5 µM for conjugates; 3 days | Dissimilar effects of GEN cell proliferation: ↑ at low concentrations and ↓ at higher concentrations. GEN 7- | [ |
| T47D and T47D-ERβ (tetracycline dependent ERβ expression) | GEN, GEN 7- | 10−5–1000 µM; 48 h | Dissimilar effects on proliferation: ↓ at low concentrations and ↑ at higher concentrations. | [ |
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| MCF-7 and T47D | DAZ, DAZ 4′- | 0.1, 1, and 10 µM; 1–24 h | Different effects on NGB: ↑equol, O-DMA, DAZ 7- | [ |
1 Mix of sulphate metabolites composition: DAZ 4′-O-sulph + DAZ 7-O-sulph + DAZ 4′,7-di-O-sulph (1 µM each); 2 Mix of gut metabolites composition: equol + O-DMA (1 µM each). Abbreviations: A, adrenaline; α2-AR, α2-adrenergic receptor; β2-AR, β2-adrenergic receptor; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; DAZ, daidzein; DH-DAZ, dihydrodaidzein; DH-RSV, dihydroresveratrol; Epi, epicatechin; ER+, oestrogen receptor+; ERE-CAT, oestrogen response element chloramphenicol acetyl transferase; γ-H2AX, H2A histone family member X phosphorylated on Ser139; GEN, genistein; gluc, glucoside; glur, glucuronide; hERα, human oestrogen receptor alpha; HMOX1, heme oxygenase 1; HP, hesperetin; hTif2, coactivator receptor-interacting domain; LBD, ligand binding domain; LDH, lactate deshydrogenase; NA, noradrenaline; NGB, neuroglobin; O-DMA, O-desmethylangolensin; PAX, paclitaxel; PC, potency concentration; PARP-1, poly [ADP-ribose] polymerase 1; Quer, quercetin; ROS, reactive oxygen species; RSV, resveratrol; 4-OHE2, 4-hydroxy-oestradiol; sulph, sulphate.
Clinical trials with dietary (poly)phenols or phenolic-containing foodstuffs in patients with breast cancer.
| Cohort and Sample Size | Trial Design | Objective | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newly biopsy-diagnosed breast cancer patients (n = 32), with no hormone therapy | Design: Pre-surgery, randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial. | Effect of flaxseed on tumour biomarkers. | Significant reductions in Ki-67 labelling index (34.2%) and in c-erbB2 expression, (71%), and an increase in apoptosis (30.7%) were observed in the flaxseed, but not in the placebo group. | [ |
| Patients (n = 66) with tissue hardness due to radiotherapy for early breast cancer (at least 24 months prior to trial entry), with no active disease | Design: Phase II, placebo-controlled, randomized trial. | Effect on the surface area of palpable breast induration after 12 months. Secondary endpoints: change in photographic breast appearance and patient self-assessment of breast hardness, pain and tenderness. | No significant difference between treatment and control groups in terms of external assessments of tissue hardness, breast appearance or patient self-assessments of breast hardness, pain or tenderness. | [ |
| Patients (n = 14) with metastatic breast cancer | Design: Open label, phase I, non-controlled trial. | Establishment of the maximal tolerated dose (MTD) of oral curcumin plus intravenous docetaxel. | MTD of curcumin was 8 g/day, in combination with docetaxel 100 mg/m2 administered every 3 w for six cycles. | [ |
| Patients (n = 40) with resected stage I-III ER- and PR- breast cancer with no active disease | Design: Randomized, phase IB, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, and dose-escalation study. | Establishment of the MTD for EGCG. | MTD was 1200 mg/d EGCG for 6 months. | [ |
| Patients (n = 28) with ductal carcinoma in situ or primary invasive stage I or II breast cancer | Design: Pre-surgery, controlled study. | Short-term effects of green tea supplementation on cancer biomarkers. | Significant decrease of Ki-67 in the tea group, but only in normal tissue. No effects on apoptosis (caspase-3), and angiogenesis (CD34) markers in benign or malignant tissue. | [ |
| Patients (n = 30) with non-inflammatory breast cancer or carcinoma in situ and prescribed RT without concurrent chemotherapy | Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial. | Effect of curcumin to reduce RDS. | Significant reduction of RDS and moist desquamation at the end of treatment vs. placebo (mean RDS = 2.6 vs. 3.4; and 28.6% vs. 87.5%; respectively). | [ |
| Postmenopausal women (n = 24) with newly-diagnosed, and resectable, ER+ breast cancer | Design: Pre-surgery, 2 × 2 factorial, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. | Effects of flaxseed and the aromatase inhibitor, anastrozole, on steroid hormones and tumour-related biomarkers. | Mean ERβ expression was approximately 40% lower from pre- to post-intervention in the flaxseed (FS) + anastrozole (AI) group only. Significant negative association for androstenedione in the FS + AI group vs. placebo, and for dehydroepiandrosterone with AI treatment. | [ |
| Patients (n = 34) with resected stage I-III ER- and PR- breast cancer with no active disease. (Ancillary study to that of Crew et al. [ | Design: Randomized, phase IB, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, and dose-escalation study. | Effect of EGCG on cancer biomarkers risk. | Significant transient decrease of serum HGF (only after 2 months of treatment) in EGCG consumers. No significant effects on VEGF, serum cholesterol and triglycerides, oxidative damage, and inflammatory biomarkers. | [ |
| Patients (n = 12) with newly diagnosed breast cancer, ER+, not eligible for neoadjuvant treatment | Design: Pre-surgery (non-controlled) dietary intervention. | Effects on NO, IGF-1 and Ki-67. | No effects on NO, IGF-1 and Ki-67 were observed. | [ |
| Patients (n = 12) with newly diagnosed breast cancer, not eligible for neoadjuvant treatment. | Design: Pre-surgery (non-controlled) dietary intervention. | Effect on cell proliferation, angiogenesis, oxidative stress, chronic inflammation, and adiposity-related endocrine mechanism. | Significant increase of testosterone. No effect in the rest of markers. | [ |
| Patients (n = 578) with non-inflammatory breast cancer or carcinoma | Design: Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial. | Confirmatory study on the effect of curcumin to reduce radiation dermatitis severity. | Curcumin did not reduce radiation dermatitis severity at the end of RT compared to placebo. | [ |
| ER+ and(or) PR+ postmenopausal women (n = 45) with resected breast cancer at early stage (with no active disease), and receiving adjuvant hormonal therapy | Design: Open-label, single-arm (no placebo-controlled). | Effect on inflammation and pain. | Significant decrease of plasma CRP (from 8.2 ± 6.4 mg/L at baseline to 5.3 ± 3.2 mg/L), and pain (21.5%) after 30 days. | [ |
| Breast cancer patients (n = 10) | Design: Pre-surgery, two arms, controlled study. | Effect of walnut consumption on gene expression in breast cancer tissue. | Significant change of 456 genes in the tumour due to walnut consumption. | [ |
| Patients (n = 81) with histologically confirmed operable ER+ breast cancer, with no distant metastasis, and receiving tamoxifen. | Design: Randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled trial. | Effect of isoflavones from red clover extract and lifestyle change to reduce side-effects of tamoxifen treatment. | The reductions in BMI and waist circumference were significantly greater in the treatment than placebo group. No differences between groups in the rest of determinations: MRS, HDLc, insulin, total cholesterol, LDLc, triglycerides, insulin resistance, sex hormone levels, endometrial thickness and breast density. | [ |
Abbreviations: CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; c-erbB2 (or HER2), Humanized epidermal growth factor receptor 2; DHA, docosahexanoic acid; EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; ER: oestrogen receptor; HGF, hepatocyte growth factor; IGF-1, insulin-like growth factor 1; IGFBP-3, Insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3; MRS, menopausal rating score; MT, malignant tissue; NT, normal tissue; PR: progesterone receptor; RDS, Radiation Dermatitis Severity score; RT, radiation therapy; SHBG, Sex hormone binding globulin; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.