Adrenal-permissive HSD3B1 genetic inheritance and risk of estrogen-driven postmenopausal breast cancer.
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Authors
Kruse, Megan L
Patel, Mona
McManus, Jeffrey
Chung, Yoon-Mi
Li, Xiuxiu
Wei, Wei
Bazeley, Peter S
Nakamura, Fumihiko
Hardaway, Aimalie
Downs, Erinn
Chandarlapaty, Sarat
Thomas, Mathew
Moore, Halle Cf
Budd, George T
Tang, WH Wilson
Hazen, Stanley L
Bernstein, Aaron
Nik-Zainal, Serena
Abraham, Jame
Sharifi, Nima
Publication Date
2021-10-22Journal Title
JCI Insight
ISSN
2379-3708
Publisher
American Society for Clinical Investigation
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Kruse, M. L., Patel, M., McManus, J., Chung, Y., Li, X., Wei, W., Bazeley, P. S., et al. (2021). Adrenal-permissive HSD3B1 genetic inheritance and risk of estrogen-driven postmenopausal breast cancer.. JCI Insight https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.150403
Abstract
BACKGROUNDGenetics of estrogen synthesis and breast cancer risk has been elusive. The 1245A→C missense-encoding polymorphism in HSD3B1, which is common in White populations, is functionally adrenal permissive and increases synthesis of the aromatase substrate androstenedione. We hypothesized that homozygous inheritance of the adrenal-permissive HSD3B1(1245C) is associated with postmenopausal estrogen receptor-positive (ER-positive) breast cancer.METHODSA prospective study of postmenopausal ER-driven breast cancer was done for determination of HSD3B1 and circulating steroids. Validation was performed in 2 other cohorts. Adrenal-permissive genotype frequency was compared between postmenopausal ER-positive breast cancer, the general population, and postmenopausal ER-negative breast cancer.RESULTSProspective and validation studies had 157 and 538 patients, respectively, for the primary analysis of genotype frequency by ER status in White female breast cancer patients who were postmenopausal at diagnosis. The adrenal-permissive genotype frequency in postmenopausal White women with estrogen-driven breast cancer in the prospective cohort was 17.5% (21/120) compared with 5.4% (2/37) for ER-negative breast cancer (P = 0.108) and 9.6% (429/4451) in the general population (P = 0.0077). Adrenal-permissive genotype frequency for estrogen-driven postmenopausal breast cancer was validated using Cambridge and The Cancer Genome Atlas data sets: 14.4% (56/389) compared with 6.0% (9/149) for ER-negative breast cancer (P = 0.007) and the general population (P = 0.005). Circulating androstenedione concentration was higher with the adrenal-permissive genotype (P = 0.03).CONCLUSIONAdrenal-permissive genotype is associated with estrogen-driven postmenopausal breast cancer. These findings link genetic inheritance of endogenous estrogen exposure to estrogen-driven breast cancer.FUNDINGNational Cancer Institute, NIH (R01CA236780, R01CA172382, and P30-CA008748); and Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award.
Keywords
Breast cancer, Endocrinology, Oncology, Prostate cancer, Sex hormones, Breast Neoplasms, Estrogens, Female, Humans, Multienzyme Complexes, Postmenopause, Progesterone Reductase, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Steroid Isomerases
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.150403
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331173
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