Rapid breast cancer growth is more in obese people
Gaining weight affects the fatty cells which changes the microenvironment around the tumour
Washington D.C.: If you are overweight, you may want to shed those extra kilos as a recent study has found that the aggressive breast cancer grows faster in an obese environment.
It's not just what's inside breast cancer cells that matters, it's also the environment surrounding cancer cells that drives the disease, according to the researchers at the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.
In an abstract that will be presented at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2017, researchers will report their preliminary findings that cancer cells grew faster when they were transplanted into fatty, obese tissue.They believe the study can help explain the obesity cancer link, providing evidence that elements of the fatty tissue surrounding cancer cells may help the cancer to grow.
"We're interested in something called the 'microenvironment,' which is basically cells around the tumours and the chemicals those cells produce," said researcher Liza Makowski. "In breast cancer, we know that the cancer is embedded in very fatty tissue, because the breast is made up largely of adipose tissue. As a person becomes obese, that can change the adipose tissue, or change this microenvironment where the cancer can start or progress."
For the study, researchers studied a type of breast cancer known as triple-negative breast cancer. Researchers transplanted and grew triple negative breast cancer cells from lean laboratory models into models of obese, lean and formerly obese microenvironments to observe how tumours grew in these different contexts.
When they analysed the gene expression patterns occurring within the tumours themselves, they found that the alterations that occurred were "extremely subtle," Makowski said, and could not explain the dramatic tumours growth they saw in the obese mice.
"Where we saw the most changes were in the mammary glands around the tumours," said first author Alyssa J. Cozzo. "This implies that the microenvironment surrounding the tumours can be a driver of tumours growth, even when the tumours cells and the other cells that make up the tumours itself are relatively similar."
"Our take-home message for this study was that, indeed, the obese microenvironment (the mammary gland surrounding the tumours) can drive tumours growth even when the tumours cells come from a lean mouse, and, critically, the obese environment can be partially or completely reversed by weight loss," Makowski said. "It's as if the cells do not 'remember' the obese exposure."