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Lack of
Social Interaction affects Health Outcomes
of Breast Cancer
Newswise — Social environment can play an
important role in the biology of disease,
including breast cancer, and lead to
significant differences in health outcome,
according to results of a study published in
Cancer Prevention Research, a journal of the
American Association for Cancer Research.
“This study uses an elegant preclinical
model and shows that social isolation alters
expression of genes important in mammary
gland tumor growth,” said the journal’s
Deputy Editor Caryn Lerman, Ph.D.
“It further elucidates the molecular
mechanisms linking environmental stress with
breast cancer development and progression.”
These findings suggest novel targets for
chemoprevention, and future studies should
evaluate whether these molecular processes
can be reversed by chemopreventive agents,
according to Lerman, who is the Mary W.
Calkins professor of psychiatry and
scientific director of the Abramson Cancer
Center at the University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia.
Previous results from clinical studies have
indicated that social support can improve
the health outcome of patients with breast
cancer.
Epidemiological
studies have suggested that social isolation
increases the mortality risk from several
chronic diseases.
Suzanne D. Conzen, M.D., associate professor
in the department of medicine and the Ben
May department for cancer research at the
University of Chicago, along with colleagues
from the Institute of Mind and Biology at
the University of Chicago, evaluated whether
an unfavorable social environment could
influence tumor growth in mice that are
genetically predisposed to mammary gland
cancer.
They found that female mice that were
chronically stressed because of social
isolation (from the time they were first
separated from their mothers) developed
significantly larger mammary gland tumors
compared to those mice that were
group-housed.
Additionally, the isolated mice developed a
heightened corticosterone stress hormone
response.
“Despite the genetic similarity of the mice
assigned to grouped versus isolated housing,
living in the stressful environment was
associated with greater tumor size,
suggesting that the social environment may
in fact alter the biology of cancer
growth…then, of course, the question becomes
how,” she said.
The researchers studied gene expression in
the mouse mammary tissues and found that
alterations in the expression levels of
metabolic pathway genes, which are expected
to favor increased tumor growth, had
occurred in the isolated mice even before
tumor size differences were measurable.
These gene expression patterns suggest
potential molecular biomarkers and/or
targets for preventive intervention in
breast cancer.
Further research is needed to focus on which
specific cell types the changes in gene
expression are taking place, according to
Conzen.
This knowledge could potentially lead to
interventions that block similar pathways
favoring the growth of human breast cancer.
“Given the increased knowledge of the human
genome we can begin to objectively identify
and dissect the specific alterations that
take place in cancer-prone tissues of
individuals in at-risk environments and that
will help us to better understand and
implement cancer prevention strategies,” she
concluded.
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