Islamabad, Jan 9 : Elevated fat and cholesterol levels
found in a typical American-style diet play an important role in the growth and
spread of breast cancer, say researchers at the Kimmel Cancer Center at
Jefferson.
The study, published in The American Journal of Pathology,
examines the role of fat and cholesterol in breast cancer development using a
mouse model. The results show that mice fed a Western diet and predisposed to
develop mammary tumors, can develop larger tumors that are faster growing and
metastasize more easily, compared to animals eating a control diet.
The
research team led by cancer biologist Philippe G. Frank, Ph.D., Assistant
Professor in the Department of Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine at
Thomas Jefferson University, was interested in learning about the link between
diet and breast cancer. The incidence rate of this cancer is five times higher
in Western countries than in other developed countries. Moreover, studies have
shown an increase in breast cancer incidence in immigrant populations that
relocate from a region with low incidence. "These facts suggest strong
environmental influence on breast cancer development," says Dr.
Frank.
Dietary fat and cholesterol have been shown to be important risk
factors in the development and progression of a number of tumor types, but
diet-based studies in humans have reached contradictory conclusions. This has
led Dr. Frank to turn to animal models of human cancer to examine links between
cholesterol, diet, and cancer.
The research team turned to the PyMT mouse
model to determine the role of dietary fat and cholesterol in tumor development.
This mouse model is believed to closely parallel the pathogenesis of human
breast cancer. PyMT mice were placed on a diet that contained 21.2 percent fat
and 0.2 percent cholesterol, reflective of a typical Western diet. A control
group of PyMT mice was fed a normal chow that had only 4.5 percent fat and
negligible amounts of cholesterol.
The researchers found that tumors
began to develop quickly in mice fed the fat/cholesterol-enriched chow. In this
group, the number of tumors was almost doubled, and they were 50 percent larger
than those observed in mice that ate a normal diet. "The consumption of a
Western diet resulted in accelerated tumor onset and increased tumor incidences,
multiplicity, and burden, suggesting an important role for dietary cholesterol
in tumor formation," Dr. Frank says. There was also a trend towards an increased
number of lung metastasis in mice fed the fatty diet, he adds.
To confirm
the aggressive nature of the cancer in animals fed a cholesterol-rich diet, the
researchers examined the levels of several biomarkers of tumor progression and
found a signature of a more advanced cancer stage, compared to tumors that
developed in the control group.
The researchers also showed that plasma
cholesterol levels in experimental mice that developed tumors were significantly
reduced compared to a group of "wild-type" mice -- animals with no
predisposition to develop tumors -- that was also fed a cholesterol-rich diet.
"This suggests that tumor formation was responsible for the reduction in blood
cholesterol levels observed in our animals," indicates Dr. Frank.
Dr.
Frank explains the use of cholesterol in breast tumors this way: "In a
neighborhood, if you want to build more houses, you need more bricks. In tumors,
cholesterol provides the bricks that are the foundation for further growth, and
this cholesterol comes from the blood. A drop in blood cholesterol may signify
that some tumors are growing as cholesterol provides support for breast cancer
growth."
"These data provide new evidence for an increase in cholesterol
utilization by breast tumors and thus provides many new avenues for prevention,
screening, and treatment," indicates Dr. Frank. These findings suggest that use
of cholesterol-lowering drugs, such as statins, may both protect against breast
cancer as well as treat patients carrying tumors. Since researchers also found
that blood cholesterol levels dropped significantly as tumors began to develop,
the study indicates measuring blood cholesterol levels may also be an effective
method of screening cancer development.
This research team also
discovered the same association between cholesterol and growth of prostate
cancer in mice in a study published in The American Journal of Pathology. The
results of these two new studies indicate, according to Dr. Frank that,
"Cholesterol does indeed seem to be an important factor in the regulation of
tumor formation in several cancer types."
Ends
SA/EN
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» High dietary fat, cholesterol linked to increased risk of breast cancer
High dietary fat, cholesterol linked to increased risk of breast cancer
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