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Effects of systemic inflammation on relapse in early breast cancer

Nicholas P. McAndrew, Lisa N. Bottalico, Clementina Mesaros, Ian A. Blair, Patricia Tsao, Jennifer M. Rosado, Tapan Ganguly, Sarah Song, Phyllis A. Gimotty, Jun J. Mao, Angela DeMichele

2021npj Breast Cancer37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chronic inflammation has been a proposed mechanism of resistance to aromatase inhibitors in breast cancer. Stratifying by HER2 status, a matched case-control study from the Wellness After Breast Cancer-II cohort was performed to assess whether or not elevated serum inflammatory biomarkers (C-Reactive protein [CRP], interleukin-6 [IL-6], and serum amyloid A [SAA]) and/or the presence of a high-risk IL-6 promoter genotype were associated with recurrence of hormone receptor positive (HR+) early breast cancer. Estrogen levels were also measured and correlated with biomarkers and disease outcomes. CRP and SAA were significantly associated with an increased risk of recurrence in the HR+/HER2- group, but not the HR+/HER2+ group. Mean serum estrogen levels were non-significantly elevated in patients who relapsed vs. non-relapsed patients. Surprisingly, high-risk IL-6 promoter polymorphisms were strongly associated with HER2+ breast cancer relapse, which has potential therapeutic implications, as elevated intracellular IL-6 has been associated with trastuzumab resistance in pre-clinical models.

Topics & Concepts

Systemic inflammationBreast cancerInflammationMedicineOncologySystemic therapyInternal medicineCancerInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease PrognosisCancer Risks and FactorsCancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers
Effects of systemic inflammation on relapse in early breast cancer | Litcius