| Literature DB >> 34768683 |
Charles T Lutz1,2,3, Lydia Livas1, Steven R Presnell1, Morgan Sexton1, Peng Wang3,4.
Abstract
Men are more likely to develop cancer than women. In fact, male predominance is one of the most consistent cancer epidemiology findings. Additionally, men have a poorer prognosis and an increased risk of secondary malignancies compared to women. These differences have been investigated in order to better understand cancer and to better treat both men and women. In this review, we discuss factors that may cause this gender difference, focusing on urothelial bladder cancer (UBC) pathogenesis. We consider physiological factors that may cause higher male cancer rates, including differences in X chromosome gene expression. We discuss how androgens may promote bladder cancer development directly by stimulating bladder urothelium and indirectly by suppressing immunity. We are particularly interested in the role of natural killer (NK) cells in anti-cancer immunity.Entities:
Keywords: X chromosome; androgens; immunosuppression; natural killer cells; sex factors; urothelial bladder cancer
Year: 2021 PMID: 34768683 PMCID: PMC8584838 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10215163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Schematic representation of androgen and AR signaling mechanisms in cells.
Effects of Androgen-Based Therapy on UBC Recurrence, Progression, and Mortality.
| Treatment | Effect on UBC | Support * | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| ADT | ↓ recurrence # | Yes | [ |
| ADT | ↓ recurrence | Yes | [ |
| ADT or 5α-R $ | ↓ recurrence, progression | Yes | [ |
| 5α-R | ↓ incidence, ↔ mortality | Yes/No | [ |
| 5α-R | ↓ recurrence | Yes | [ |
| 5α-R | ↔ recurrence, ↓ deaths | No/Yes | [ |
| 5α-R | ↔ incidence | No | [ |
* Support for the hypothesis that UBCs respond drug treatment. # Recurrence was less in men with AR+ UBC $ 5α-R, 5α-reductase inhibitor drug.
Figure 2Blood from five patients was studied before and 92–96 days (or 51 days in one patient shown as a dashed line in IL-2 panel) after the start of ADT, which included Lupron®, with or without additional ADT drugs. In all cases, short-term Casodex® pre-treatment was used to prevent a Lupron-associated testosterone flare. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated for 20 h with IL-2 (200 U/mL), IL-15 (100 ng/mL), or IL-12/IL-18 (10/100 ng/mL), as indicated above each panel. The cells were harvested and NK cell intracellular MIP-1β was measured by flow cytometry, using standard methods [156]. Shown are responses by mature CD56dim NK cells. Each symbol represents responses by the same patient and patient age is indicated in the panels. Significance was assessed by paired student’s t-test. NS = not significant.