npj Breast Cancer (Jan 2021)

Effects of systemic inflammation on relapse in early breast cancer

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

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41523-020-00212-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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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.