| Literature DB >> 33194937 |
Veronica C Jones1, Eric C Dietze1, Tijana Jovanovic-Talisman1, Jeannine S McCune1, Victoria L Seewaldt1.
Abstract
Currently, tamoxifen is the only drug approved for reduction of breast cancer risk in premenopausal women. The significant cardiovascular side effects of tamoxifen, coupled with lack of a survival benefit, potential for genotoxicity, and failure to provide a significant risk-reduction for estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer, all contribute to the low acceptance of tamoxifen chemoprevention in premenopausal women at high-risk for breast cancer. While other prevention options exist for postmenopausal women, there is a search for well-tolerated prevention agents that can simultaneously reduce risk of breast cancers, cardiovascular disease, and type-2 diabetes. Metformin is a well-tolerated oral biguanide hypoglycemic agent that is prescribed worldwide to over 120 million individuals with type-2 diabetes. Metformin is inexpensive, safe during pregnancy, and the combination of metformin, healthy lifestyle, and exercise has been shown to be effective in preventing diabetes. There is a growing awareness that prevention drugs and interventions should make the "whole woman healthy." To this end, current efforts have focused on finding low toxicity alternatives, particularly repurposed drugs for chemoprevention of breast cancer, including metformin. Metformin's mechanisms of actions are complex but clearly involve secondary lowering of circulating insulin. Signaling pathways activated by insulin also drive biologically aggressive breast cancer and predict poor survival in women with breast cancer. The mechanistic rationale for metformin chemoprevention is well-supported by the scientific literature. Metformin is cheap, safe during pregnancy, and has the potential to provide heart-healthy breast cancer prevention. On-going primary and secondary prevention trials will provide evidence whether metformin is effective in preventing breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; chemoprevention; diabetes; heart disease; metformin; prevention
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194937 PMCID: PMC7658387 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.509714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1(A) Circulating insulin and glucose levels in healthy individuals (Healthy), insulin-resistant individuals (Resistant), and individuals with type-2 diabetes (Diabetes) at baseline and at 2 h after eating. (B) Impact of insulin-resistance on pancreatic islet cells, peripheral muscle, and individual. Insulin resistance in peripheral muscle tissue results in increased insulin demands from the pancreas. Increased circulating insulin drives hunger and increases weight, leading to a positive feedback loop that increases the chance of an individual developing type-2 diabetes. Adapted from (42).
Select list of clinically relevant known metformin pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic genes.
| OCT1 | Low-function alleles linked to less reduction in HgbA1c | ( | |
| OCT2 | Change in metformin PK; no known clinical impact | ( | |
| OCT3 | Changes in metformin PK; no known clinical impact | ( | |
| MATE1 | Alleles linked to increased reduction in HgbA1c | ( | |
| MATE2 | Low-function alleles linked to less reduction in HgbA1c | ( | |
| Serine racemase | Metabolic changes | ( | |
| ATM | Low- and high-function alleles linked to change in HgbA1c | ( | |
| Upstream regulator of AMPK | Decreased ovulation in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome. | ( | |
| AMPK sub-units | Incidence type-2 diabetes | ( | |
| Subunit beta cell potassium channel | Incidence type-2 diabetes | ( |
Figure 2Impact of metformin on insulin-resistance, serum insulin, and signaling pathways important for breast cancer aggressive biology.
Figure 3Metformin signaling in the liver.
Figure 4AMPK-dependent and AMPK-independent metformin signaling. Adapted from (42).
Review of metformin in breast cancer treatment or prevention.
| Breast phase II ( | Insulin-lowering effects of metformin in women with early stage breast cancer | Metformin 500 mg tid ×6 months | IBC completed therapy with fasting insulin of ≥45 pmol/L and glucose <7.0 mmol/L | Serum insulin |
| NCT00897884 ( | Clinical and biologic effects of metformin in early stage breast cancer | Window-of-opportunity. Single group. Metformin 500 mg tid ×3 weeks | Early stage disease. Women 18–70 years; T1-4; presurgical | Comparison pre- and post-operative biopsy; Ki67 |
| NCT00909506 | Efficacy and safety of adjuvant metformin for operable breast cancer patients | Window-of-opportunity. Metformin 500 mg ×1–2 weeks; then 500 mg bid weeks 3–24 | Operable breast cancer BMI>23; no medications except tamoxifen | Weight loss |
| NCT00930579 ( | Effects of metformin on AMP/mTOR pathway | Window-of-opportunity. Metformin 1,500 mg qd for >12 weeks before surgery | Operable breast cancer; BMI >30 overweigh and obese women with newly diagnosed breast cancer | |
| NCT00933309 ( | Impact of obesity and obesity treatments on breast cancer | Exemestane with metformin 1,000 mg per day and Rosiglitazone | Postmenopausal obese, ER+ metastatic breast cancer | Dose-limiting toxicity |
| NCT01042379 | I-SPY 2 TRIAL: neoadjuvant and personalized adaptive novel agents to treat breast cancer | Window-of-opportunity. Randomized novel drugs in combination w/ standard chemotherapy | Presurgical breast cancer—neoadjuvant chemotherapy | Pathologic complete remission rate |
| NCT01101438 (MA-32) ( | A phase III randomized trial of metformin vs. placebo in early stage breast cancer | Randomization to 1 of 2 treatment arms | Patients stratified by ER/PR status, BMI, HER2 status, and prior chemotherapy | Disease free survival |
| NCT01310231 ( | A trial of standard chemotherapy with metformin (vs. placebo) in women with metastatic breast cancer | Standard chemotherapy | Metastatic breast cancer 1–4th line chemotherapy | |
| NCT01650506 | Study of Erlotinib and metformin in triple-negative breast cancer | Phase I to establish maximum tolerated dose | Open label single arm. Diagnosis of triple-negative breast cancer | Maximum tolerated dose |
| NCT01980823 | Pre-surgical trial of the combination of metformin and atorvastatin in newly diagnosed operable breast cancer | Window-of-opportunity. Metformin 500 mg a.m. and 1,000 mg p.m. w/atorvastatin 80 mg or at least 2 weeks prior to surgery | Histologically confirmed DCIS or IBC who undergo CNB followed by surgery | Ki-67 |
| NCT02145559 ( | Pharmacodynamic study of sirolimus and metformin in patients w/advanced solid tumors | Pharmaco-dynamics study | Phase 1 | Investigation of combination therapy in targeting mTOR pathway |
| NCT02278965 | Metformin and omega-3 fatty acids in women with a history of early stage breast cancer | Metformin 850 mg bid and Omega-3 1,120 mg bid ×12 months | Stage 1–3; no evidence of disease at entry | Safety and feasibility |
| NCT02874430 | Metformin hydrochloride and doxycycline in treating patients with localized breast or uterine cancer | Metformin days 1–3; then 2x per day on day 4. Treatment repeats every 7 days | Breast or Uterine cancer; localized; no neoadjuvant chemotherapy | Increased caveolin in cancer associated fibroblasts |
| NCT03238495 | Randomized trial of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy with or without metformin for HER2 positive operable breast cancer (HERMET) | Randomized taxotere, Carboplatin, Herceptin + Pertuzumab | cT1c-cT4a-d HER2+ breast cancer | Pathologic complete response |
| Instituto Europeo di Oncologica 2006-006236-22 ( | Use of metformin to reduce serum level of testosterone and improve the metabolic picture for women treated with breast cancer | Metformin 1,000 vs. 1,500 mg/d ×3 months | Postmenopausal with history of IBC and 6 months post-surgery, on TAM for at least 6 months and plan to continue, or at least 6 months post-chemo | 1,500 mg/d decreased testosterone by 23% ( |
| Instituto Europeo di Oncologica 2007-000306-70 ( | Effect of metformin on biomarker activity in primary breast cancer. | Window-of-opportunity trial. Metformin 500 mg/d ×1 week; then metformin 1,000 mg/d ×1 week vs. placebo | Menopausal; Stage 1–2 IBC, >1 cm, no history of diabetes | 3.4% decrease in Ki-67 ( |
| Instituto Europeo di Oncologica 2008-004912-10 ( | A randomized double-blind pre-surgical phase II study on activity of metformin on breast cancer cell proliferation | Window-of opportunity trial. Metformin 850 mg/d ×3 days; then metformin 850 mg bid day 4–28 vs. placebo; 4 weeks prior to surgery | Presurgical-Stage IIII IBC patient not suitable for neoadjuvant therapy | No overall change in Ki-67 10.5% decrease in Ki-67 if HOMA >2.8 ( |
| ACTRN 12610000219088 | Phase I trial metformin followed by reduction mammoplasty | 500 mg/d ×1 week; then 1,000 mg/d ×4 weeks; then reduction mammoplasty | Women age 40–60 | AMPK signaling and aromatase expression in reduction mastectomy |
| NCT01302379 ( | Reach for Health study: Obesity-related mechanisms and mortality in breast cancer survivors | Metformin | Breast cancer survivor; no active disease | Study powered for metformin vs. placebo and weight loss vs. control. Metformin associated with decrease in serum insulin, estradiol, testosterone |
| NCT01793948 | Metformin hydrochloride vs. placebo in overweight and obese patients at elevated risk for breast cancer | 850 mg qd ×30 days; then bid ×11 months vs. placebo | Postmenopausal and high risk for breast cancer with BMI ≥25 | Changes in mammary epithelial phosphorylated proteins |
| NCT01905046 | Metformin hydrochloride vs. placebo in preventing breast cancer in obese premenopausal women with atypical hyperplasia or | 850 mg qd ×4 weeks; then 850 mg bid vs. placebo ×24 months | Premenopausal, BMI >25, prior | 1O Endpoint: Regression of atypia at 12 and 24 months |
| NCT02028221 | Phase II study of metformin for reduction of obesity-associated breast cancer risk | 850 mg ×1 month; then 850 mg bid ×11 months vs. placebo | Premenopausal women age 30–45 with BMI of 25 or greater and metabolic syndrome | Change in breast density from baseline at 6 and 12 months |
| NCT02431676 | Survivorship promotion in reducing IGF-1 trial | Metformin | Breast cancer | Serum IGF-1 |
| NCT04300790 | Study to evaluate the effect of Metformin in prevention of hyperglycemia in HR+/HER2- PI3KCA-mutant advanced breast cancer patients [METALLICA] | Metformin | Prevention hyperglycemia in cancer patients | Number of patients with grade 3–4 hyperglycemia |
IBC, invasive breast cancer; DCIS, ductal carcinoma in situ; qd, one a day; bid, twice a day; tid, three times a day; Tam, Tamoxifen; BMI, body mass index; HOMA, Homeostasis Model Assessment; CNB, core needle biopsy; RR, recurrence rate; PFS, progression free survival; OS, overall survival.
AH, atypical hyperplasia; LCIS, lobular carcinoma in situ; DCIS, ductal carcinoma in situ; qd, one a day; bid, twice a day; tid, three times a day; Tam, Tamoxifen; BMI, body mass index; RPPM, reverse phase proteomic microarray profiling.