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Department of Surgery,
1 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and
2 Department of Physiology, Robert H Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Feinberg School of Medicine of Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA
(Requests for offprints should be addressed to S A Khan, Lynn Sage Breast Center, 675 North St Clair, Galter 13-174, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA; Email: skhan{at}nmh.org)
| Abstract |
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andß, markers of proliferative and apoptotic response, and protein markers of estrogen action in breast cells and nipple fluid. Studies of breast hormone levels in nipple aspiration fluid (NAF) show that estrone sulphate is present in large quantities in the normal breast, while the differences in serum ovarian steroids that are seen in pre- and postmenopausal women are blunted in NAF. The variability of several estradiol precursors in NAF over time is relatively small, a useful attribute of potential biomarkers of breast cancer risk, particularly if they are reversible with intervention in Phase 2 prevention trials. These studies are already providing new insights into the hormonal etiology of breast cancer, and should lead to the identification of robust, reversible biomarkers for use in breast cancer prevention studies.
| Introduction |
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| The current paradigm |
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This paradigm is consistent with present evidence: length of reproductive life and number of ovulatory cycles increase breast cancer risk (Hankinson & Hunter 2002) and breast epithelial proliferation is highest in the luteal phase (Ferguson & Anderson 1981). Exposure to high postmenopausal serum estrogen levels contributes to increased risk of breast cancer (Trichopoulos et al. 1983, Hankinson et al. 1998). However, there are gaps; no long-term studies have related high proliferative rates of breast epithelium to increased risk of breast cancer. The value of proliferation as a surrogate endpoint in the breast has not been demonstrated, and the role of apoptosis (whether increased or decreased in the high-risk breast) is poorly understood. The importance of local breast hormone levels with regard to breast cancer risk has not been studied.
Studies of serum hormone levels and hormone metabolism relevant to breast cancer
Studies of circulating sex steroid levels and breast cancer risk have necessarily focused on postmenopausal women, since the menstrual cycle variations of premenopausal women have been a significant barrier to such investigations. Among postmenopausal women, correlations between serum estrogen levels and breast cancer risk have been observed in almost all of the larger studies, with relative risk estimates ranging from 1 to 4 for several of the estrogenic hormones studied. In particular, the results of a nested case-control analysis of the Nurses Health Cohort showed the strongest effects for estrone sulfate (ES), dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) and estradiol, with relative risks of 4.34, 4.15 and 3.53 respectively (Hankinson et al. 1998). Several other case-control studies have shown that serum estradiol approached significant trends within quartiles or quintiles (Toniolo et al. 1995, Kabuto et al. 2000). An overview analysis of studies published until 1997 concluded that serum estradiol levels in women who develop breast cancer are about 15% higher than in those who do not (Thomas et al. 1997).
Among premenopausal women, serum hormone levels were measured at specified intervals during the menstrual cycle in a case-control study of 169 breast cancer subjects; no significant relationships were found with estradiol in any part of the menstrual cycle (Sturgeon et al. 2004). A possible solution to the problem of fluctuating hormone levels in premenopausal women is the measurement of estradiol and progesterone in salivary samples, since saliva can be collected by the subjects at home and stored without refrigeration for subsequent analysis once a full month of samples has been collected. The data can be analyzed to give an integrated level over the entire menstrual cycle. In addition, salivary steroids are thought to reflect levels of unbound, bioavailable serum steroids, and may be more relevant to studies of breast hormonal exposure than serum or plasma steroid levels.
Measurements of hormones in nipple aspiration fluid (NAF)
With the development of therapeutic approaches based on inhibition of extra-ovarian estradiol synthesis, and data regarding local synthesis of estrogen in breast tumors, there is increasing interest in the idea that local hormone levels in the breast may have more relevance to promotion of breast cancer than serum hormone levels. The analysis of estrogens in NAF has been performed by several investigators in the past (Rose et al. 1986, Ernster et al. 1987, Petrakis et al. 1987), and we have performed several studies of hormones and hormone response proteins in the soluble fraction of NAF (Chatterton et al. 2000, 2003, 2004, 2005). The results from these studies are discussed below.
Relationship of hormones in NAF to concentrations of the hormones in serum
In several studies of serum and NAF estradiol and progesterone, the correlations between serum and NAF hormone levels have been variable. Our first and smallest study (n = 10) showed a correlation between serum and NAF estradiol of 0.55, with a mean mid-luteal phase serum estradiol of 292 ± 36 pmol/l and simultaneous NAF estradiol of 1478 ± 324 pmol/l, (Chatterton et al. 2003). However, subsequent studies, using the same methodology have not shown a significant correlation between serum and NAF estradiol. In a second study of 47 women the serum estradiol concentration at mid-luteal phase was similar (356 ± 65.4 pmol/l), whereas in NAF it was lower (484 ± 28 pmol/l) (Chatterton et al. 2004). The latter value corresponds closely to concentrations of estradiol in tissue of premenopausal women when the tissue concentration is expressed in pmol/g (Thijssen et al. 1986, Blankenstein et al. 1999). There was no correlation between concentrations of DHEAS and ES in serum and those in NAF. Correlations between serum and NAF hormone levels have not generally been published in older studies, although Ernster et al. (1987) reported a correlation of 0.1 between serum and NAF estradiol, and 0.14 between serum and NAF estrone, both of which were not statistically significant.
Progesterone, which has not been measured previously in NAF, averaged 207.2 ± 3.8 ng/ml in our first study, and serum averaged 15.5 ± 2.2 ng/ml. In the second study NAF progesterone averaged 91.5 ± 9.9 ng/ml and serum averaged 15.5 ± 0.3 ng/ml. The correlations between serum and NAF in the two studies were 0.27 and 0.20 respectively. Thus, accumulation of progesterone relative to serum levels was also significantly lower in the second group of subjects, who were also more physically active, suggesting an effect of exercise on uptake or retention of estrogen and progesterone by the breast.
In a subsequent study, using similar methods, we have examined the effects of oral contraceptives (OCs) and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on NAF and serum hormone levels (Chatterton et al. 2005). The correlations between serum and NAF hormones are generally poor but mean NAF hormone levels reflected the overall trends in mean hormone levels seen in the serum. Thus, estradiol levels were lower in both serum and NAF of OC users compared with controls, and higher in serum and NAF of HRT users compared with controls. However, in postmenopausal HRT users, the differences in NAF estradiol were more marked than those in serum estradiol: NAF estradiol of women on HRT was 18-fold higher than postmenopausal control women, whereas serum estradiol was only 2.5-fold higher. From these data, it appears that changes in serum hormones are reflected in NAF, but only after a matter of days.
Our results are in general agreement with the older literature in this area (summarized in Table 1
) in that NAF hormone levels are higher than serum levels, and the decline in serum estradiol seen with menopause is not seen to the same extent in NAF (Chatterton et al. 2005). There have been few investigations of NAF hormone levels in relation to breast cancer risk. In a study of women with clinically normal breasts, those with benign disease, and those with breast cancer, Ernster et al. (1987) saw no significant differences in mean values across groups. Petrakis et al. (1987) have compared the breast fluid estradiol and estrone levels between nulliparous, parous and lactating women, and have reported that parous and lactating women had significantly lower levels than those who were nulliparous. And Rose et al. (1986) have compared NAF hormone levels in American and Finnish women, and found those in Finnish women (who have a lower breast cancer risk) to be lower. Previously reported estradiol levels in NAF, measured without purification, were 2 to 8 times higher than those reported by Chatterton et al. 2003, 2004 (Rose et al. 1986, Ernster et al. 1987). This difference was shown to be potentially attributable to cross-reactivity of the antiserum with ES and DHEAS, which are present in 104 and 105 times greater concentrations respectively than estradiol in NAF (Chatterton et al. 2004). Purification of the samples was required for elimination of the cross-reacting steroids.
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Data from the second group described above include measurement of potential androgen precursors that may be metabolized to estradiol within the breast. With estradiol as the outcome measure, and accounting for the other variables such as breast and time of sampling by covariance techniques, the ß-estimate for DHEA was 0.153 ± 0.060 (P=0.017) (Chatterton et al. 2004). Thus, even in premenopausal subjects androgen precursors were significantly related to the levels of estradiol in the breast.
ES is of interest because of its potential as a precursor of estradiol and its high concentration in NAF. ES within the breast was also related to NAF estradiol; the ß-estimate was 0.201 ± 0.066 (P=0.004). Since ES circulates in relatively high concentration, and is concentrated in breast fluid, it may also be an important source of estradiol in the breast, as proposed by others (Pasqualini et al. 1996, 1997, Purohit et al. 1999).
We have found evidence of conversion of ES to estrone in breast parenchymal cells from grossly normal breast tissue of women undergoing excision of benign lumps (Chatterton et al. 2003). Despite the low concentration of ES in the cells, it was converted linearly within a 1000-fold concentration range of up to 10 µM to estrone by intact cells, having a mean halftime of conversion of 628 min/106 cells. Upon comparing the rate of metabolism of ES in homogenized cells to that in intact cells, we found that homogenized cells had a conversion half-time that was about 50% shorter, suggesting that the plasma membrane is a barrier to conversion to estrone. These results are consistent with the reported site of the sulfatase in the microsomal fraction of the cells (Hernandez-Guzman et al. 2001). However, it is also possible that hydrolysis of ES occurs without entering the cell. Willemsen et al. (1988) have shown that estrogen sulfatase activity also resides on the plasma membrane. In this case, the high levels of estrone sulfatase that enter the lumen of the ductal tree, apparently by an active transport process (Pizzagalli et al. 2003), may be hydrolyzed to estrone before entering the epithelial cells. Thus estrogen sulfatase activity would make ES a ready source of estrone to the mammary parenchyma.
Relationship between estrogens in breast fluid and estrogen response proteins
Estradiol promotes the synthesis of both epidermal growth factor (EGF) and cathepsin D; both are present in measurable concentrations in NAF, and may indicate whether the concentrations of estradiol in NAF are biologically meaningful. In the second group of 47 subjects mentioned above, both estradiol and ES were significantly related to NAF EGF levels; ß-estimates were 0.082 ± 0.035 (P=0.024) and 0.216 ± 0.035 (P=0.0001) respectively (Chatterton et al. 2004). Similarly, cathepsin D showed a signi. cant relationship to estradiol and ES, with ß-estimates of 0.28 (P=0.015) and 0.32 (P=0.002). Similar estimates of the relationships between serum estradiol and EGF and cathepsin D were not statistically significant in our study. NAF pS2 has also been shown to increase in postmenopausal women starting HRT, and decrease in premenopausal women starting goserelin therapy (Harding et al. 2000). Overall, it seems reasonable to assume that NAF estrogen concentration provides a better estimate of biologically active estrogen in the breast than do serum levels of estradiol. The fact that ES had higher correlations with these products may relate to the fact that its concentration is very high in NAF and easily and accurately measured. On the other hand, levels of estradiol in NAF were often at the lower limit of sensitivity of the method and for approximately 30% of the samples were not detected by the immunoassay method.
Variability of NAF hormones over time
In the group of 47 premenopausal women described above, we determined the stability of hormone measurements in NAF over a 15 month period. Saliva was collected daily throughout the baseline menstrual cycle and at 4, 12 and 15 months to ascertain menstrual cycle characteristics, and NAF and blood were collected approximately 7 days after ovulation. The analytic methods have been described previously (Chatterton et al. 2004). Concentrations of these analytes were compared between breasts of each woman and within breasts across the full 15 month period. The data are listed in Table 2
, showing that the correlation over time is very good, and slightly greater than the correlation of simultaneous measurements between breasts.
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Sauter et al. (1996) have investigated the role of human kallikrein-3 (hK-3), also known as prostate specific antigen (PSA) in the breast as a marker for breast cancer risk. In a study of breast cancer patients and control women, an inverse relationship was seen between NAF PSA and the presence of epithelial proliferation and malignancy, particularly after the menopause. NAF PSA levels were associated with the mid-cycle rise of serum progesterone in seven of eight women but not with serum estradiol or gonadotropins, indicating that sampling must be done at the same stage of the menstrual cycle for consistent results (Sauter et al. 1998). A negative association was seen between NAF PSA and disease progression from Duct carcinoma in situ to metastatic breast cancer (Sauter et al. 2004a,b). Lower PSA concentrations have also been described in estrogen- and progesterone-receptor-negative tumors (Black et al. 2000). Additional hK-2, -6 and -10 are expressed in the breast, but hK-6 and hK-10 were not associated with breast cancer. hK-2 exhibited patterns similar to that of pS2 but did not provide additional useful information (Sauter et al. 2004b).
| Estrogen receptors in the normal breast |
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Estrogen receptor-
(ER
) occupies a pivotal position in breast cancer biology, and has been the subject of intense study in malignant tumors. The earliest studies, using ligand-binding assays, showed little ER
expression in the normal breast (Feherty et al. 1971, Wittliff et al. 1971), but subsequent immunohistochemical (IHC) methods showed that a relatively small proportion (under 10%) of luminal epithelial cells express ER
in the normal breast, whereas myoepithelial and stromal cells do not (Petersen et al. 1987). A number of IHC studies then followed, and established that ER
expression is higher in the follicular than in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (Battersby et al. 1992), and that expression is higher in European than in non-European women (Ricketts et al. 1991). Since steroid receptor content appears to limit cellular response to steroids (Vanderbilt et al. 1987, Webb et al. 1992), we hypothesized that increased ER
expression in histologically normal breast epithelium may result in an augmented response to available estrogen, and may be a risk factor for breast cancer. In an initial study of 120 women, ER
expression in benign breast epithelium was measured using an IHC assay (Abbott ER-ICA) on frozen sections. ER
-positive epithelium was found in a greater proportion of cases than controls (85 vs 55%), with an adjusted odds ratio (OR) of 6.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.428.9 (Khan et al. 1994). This study was extended in order to examine the influence of breast cancer risk factors such as age at menarche, parity and menopause, and use of exogenous estrogens on breast epithelial ER
expression (Khan et al. 1999). Again, women with breast cancer expressed higher levels of ER
than benign disease controls, but this was independent of known breast cancer risk factors, with the exception of alcohol use, where there was a trend towards higher ER
expression in premenopausal women who consumed more than three alcoholic drinks per week. We also observed that the breast epithelium of controls on HRT displayed significantly higher ER expression than that of controls not on HRT, an observation subsequently reproduced by Lawson et al. (2001), who showed that obesity also contributes to this higher expression.
The notion of increased ER
expression in the highrisk breast is supported by the consistency of high expression over time, demonstrated in a study of 28 women undergoing two separate breast biopsies at least 6 months apart (Khan et al. 2002). On categorizing the women into high and low expressers based on an ER labeling index (ER LI) value of 10, there was 86% concordance between the first and second samples. Among premenopausal women, the ability to predict the second ER LI from the first was improved significantly by the addition of the adjusted day of the menstrual cycle at the time of sampling, suggesting that a substantial part of the inter-sample variation in premenopausal women was explained by variation in the menstrual cycle day.
Ethnic variations suggest that groups at higher risk for breast cancer also have higher levels of ER expression: in a study comparing ER
expression in Australian women of European origin to that in Japanese women living in Japan, ER
expression was higher in the former, consistent with their higher breast cancer risk (Lawson et al. 1999). The same group of investigators then compared ER
expression in Japanese women in Hawaii with those in Japan, and found non-significantly higher levels in the Hawaiian Japanese, again in agreement with their higher breast cancer risk (Lawson et al. 2002). Finally, there are now several studies documenting the increase in the proportion of ER
-expressing cells seen in proliferative breast lesions (Jacquemier et al. 1982, Shoker et al. 1999, 2000).
Evidence of dysregulation of ER
expression relative to the hormonal environment
Analysis of ER
expression by menstrual phase in our case-control study (Khan et al. 1998) revealed that the proportion of positive cells declined in luteal phase in controls, as seen in studies of naturally cycling women (Battersby et al. 1992). However, in women with cancer, this luteal phase decrease was not observed. There was a significant case-control difference in the ER LI in the 2528 day interval (P<0.03), and a significant trend towards increasing ORs through the menstrual cycle, from an OR of 1.3 in days 15, compared with an OR of 4.4 in days 2528 (P<0.015). These data suggest that ER
expression varies differently between cases and controls through the menstrual cycle. Since other lines of evidence suggest that an increase in ambient estradiol leads to down-regulation of the receptor (Saceda et al. 1988, Ree et al. 1989), we then looked at ER
expression in normal breast epithelium relative to circulating estradiol levels. Here we found a significant negative correlation between serum estradiol and breast epithelial ER LI in the controls, but no correlation in women with breast cancer (Khan et al. 1999). These findings together suggest a disturbance of hormonal regulation of ER
expression in the breast epithelium of high-risk women.
Do ER
-expressing cells proliferate?
Studies of dual labeling of breast epithelial sections for ER
and markers of proliferation have suggested that ER
-expressing cells are distinct from proliferating cells, since markers of proliferation (Ki-67, [3H]thymidine) do not co-localize with ER
(Clarke et al. 1997, Russo et al. 1999). Clarke et al. (1997) have suggested that ER
-expressing cells are a distinct population and exert a paracrine influence on surrounding cells, which respond by proliferating. As the normal breast progresses through increasing degrees of neoplasia, the separation of the two compartments blurs, and co-localization of proliferation-related antigens and ER
is seen, suggesting a dysregulation of ER
expression. However, the number of co-localizing cells remains very small in malignancies, increasing from 0.03% in normal epithelium, to 1.3% in invasive cancer (Clarke et al. 1997). The alternative explanation (that ER
expression is a cell cycle-related phenomenon) is addressed in a recent study of wild-type and ERß / mice (Cheng et al. 2004). Oophorectomized mice were exposed to estradiol, an ERß agonist, tamoxifen, or placebo. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) was infused for labeling of S-phase cells, and mice were killed at 2 or 48 h. This study confirmed that estradiol down-regulates ER
in mammary epithelial cells; colocalization of ER
and BrdU was not observed at 2 h, but was seen at 48 h, suggesting that ER
-expressing cells do go on to divide, and do not represent two distinct cell populations.
ER
data from studies using minimal sampling techniques
More recent studies using methods such as rFNA also suggest that increased expression of ER
correlates with the probability of breast cancer development. In a comparison of 244 high-risk and 30 low-risk women, Fabian et al. (1997) found that ER
expression was significantly related to the presence of cytological atypia, and the subsequent development of cancer, particularly if a low threshold of positivity (1+) was used. These findings are consistent with our breast tissue studies, where the ability to discriminate cases from controls based on ER
expression in normal and non-proliferative epithelium is optimal with a low threshold of ER
positivity (Khan et al. 1998). In a subsequent analysis of 480 women studied by rFNA, the same group found that ER
expression greater than 1+ was the only biomarker among a set of five (DNA ploidy, p53, EGF receptor, HER2/NEU, ER
) that was significantly associated with the subsequent development of malignancy, although in the final multivariate model, only Gail risk and cytological atypia remained significant (Fabian et al. 2000).
In DL samples from high-risk women, we have encountered much higher levels of ER
positivity than we reported previously in the control groups of our earlier studies, with a median LI of 26%, probably because we are using newer, more sensitive antibodies, and are studying high-risk women who may have higher proportions of ER-positive cells. So far, we have seen reassuring stability of ER expression over two time points 6 months apart, when the second sample is obtained in the same phase of the menstrual cycle as the first (Bhandare et al. 2003). Our on-going study will also provide information as to whether or not high ER
expression in benign or atypical epithelium identifies women more likely to benefit from endocrine prevention strategies.
ERß
The second estrogen receptor, ERß, was cloned in 1996, and has been intensively investigated regarding its role in normal mammary gland development and breast cancer (Kuiper et al. 1996, Gustafsson & Warner 2000). Its relevance as a marker of risk, or as a surrogate endpoint in prevention studies is not clear as yet, but deserves investigation for several reasons, including the fact that it appears to influence activity of ER
. Several studies on normal breast epithelium have revealed that ERß is more abundant than ER
in the nuclei of epithelial cells lining the ducts and the lobules, and that a strong staining pattern is seen in myoepithelial cells, with varying intensity of staining documented in intralobular stromal cell nuclei, nuclei of endothelial cells and occasional lymphocytes (Speirs et al. 2002). ERß is expressed in the majority of normal lobules, in contrast to ER
(median fraction of positive cells over 90% in one study, compared with 22.6% for ER
(Shaaban et al. 2003)). The proportion of positive cells decreases with increasing degrees of neoplasia, with a steady decrease in proliferative lesions, carcinoma in situ, and invasive disease (Roger et al. 2001). Thus the ratio of ERß: ER
measured at the mRNA level decreases from normal breast to breast cancer (Leygue et al. 1998).
Relative levels of ER
and ERß are an important determinant of cellular sensitivity to estrogens. Although ER
is the stronger transcriptional activator of the two, at physiological concentrations of estradiol, coexpression of ERß results in suppression of both the efficacy and potency of hormone-stimulated responses. The ability of ERß to function as a transcriptional activator or inhibitor, depending on the agonist concentration, suggests that completely different patterns of gene expression may be observed at different hormone levels (Hall & McDonnell 1999). Such interactions may influence the action of potential preventive agents such as genistein (one of the major phytoestrogens in soy), which appears to have a greater affinity for ERß than for ER
(Kuiper et al. 1997). This could indicate that phytoestrogens work as antioxidants and that ERß is involved in the control of antioxidant-regulated genes, the products of which control the concentrations of free radicals and reactive oxygen species in the cell (Gustafsson 1999).
| Proliferation and apoptosis in normal breast |
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However, prospective evidence that cell proliferation indices in the normal epithelium and benign breast lesions may serve as a marker of breast cancer risk is still lacking, and there are no longitudinal studies demonstrating that the proliferative index of normal epithelium or proliferative lesions relates to breast cancer risk. Such studies are difficult to perform, since the proliferative index of breast epithelium is low, reproducible quantitation of proliferative indices in large numbers of samples is problematic, and in premenopausal women samples need to be acquired in a specific menstrual phase. These barriers have not so far been overcome in human studies. However, one study of ER
expression and proliferative indices of hyperplastic lesions in women who subsequently developed breast cancer, compared with those who did not, suggests that the Ki-67 labeling index (Ki-67 LI) is higher in the hyperplastic foci of women who later developed cancer (Shaaban et al. 2002). In this small study (27 cases and 16 controls), the cases and controls were not age-matched and although both ER
and Ki-67 are known to vary significantly with age in normal epithelium, the relationship to age in hyperplastic lesions has not been assessed. The OR was higher for ER
LI (2.3, 95% CI 0.77.2) than for Ki-67 LI (1.5, 95% CI 0.55.8).
The measurement of proliferative activity as a potential surrogate endpoint biomarker in the assessment of preventive efficacy of new agents needs similar validation in long-term studies. Several studies of short-term neoadjuvant therapy in women with breast cancer have shown a significant decrease in the proliferative indices of malignant lesions with endocrine therapy, but this decrease was not independently predictive of response (Chang et al. 2000). In another study of 32 women without known breast cancer who were given letrozole treatment, estradiol levels dropped significantly, but there was no significant change in proliferative indices at 3 months (Harper-Wynne et al. 2002). The problems of utilizing Ki-67 labeling as a predictor of response are illustrated in a subsequent non-randomized study by the same group, where Ki-67 LI was examined as a predictor of response in 106 women with large breast cancers who were treated with tamoxifen, chemotherapy or a combination (Assersohn et al. 2003). Another group of 37 untreated women underwent two separate FNAs to assess the reproducibility of Ki-67 labeling; analysis of their proliferative indices suggested that a minimal relative decline of 39% was required for statistical significance. For the final analysis, the authors excluded women whose Ki-67 LI was under 5% because of concerns regarding the precision of the measurement; this resulted in 20 of 33 (61%) of the tamoxifen-treated group being excluded. In the chemoprevention setting then, where baseline proliferative indices tend to run around 2%, the difficulties of utilizing Ki-67 labeling as a surrogate biomarker seems significant. Data from ongoing studies should help resolve these questions.
Published data on proliferative indices in cytological samples of breast epithelium obtained by DL are not available so far, but again the hurdles discussed above with regard to the variability of measuring low frequency events would be compounded by the small samples available in such studies. We have found that the Ki-67 LI of DL samples has a median value of 0.3%, measured in a median of 5690 cells. Whether or not this value is lower than that reported in FNA studies because exfoliated cells tend not to be proliferating, or for other reasons, is not clear at the moment, but trypan blue exclusion rates of these samples range from 50 to 90% (Khan et al., unpublished observations).
Apoptosis in normal breast epithelium
Apoptosis or programmed cell death plays a critical role in normal mammary gland development. Homeostasis in normal tissue is a balance of proliferation and apoptosis, and alteration in this balance has been postulated to set off a series of changes ultimately leading to malignancy (Thompson 1995). Morphologically, apoptotic cells exhibit characteristic changes such as cell contraction, cytoplasmic blebbing, nuclear condensation and genomic autodigestion into nucleosomal fragments. The measurement of apoptosis in the normal breast has been performed by the counting of apoptotic bodies on histological sections, by the TUNEL (TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling) reaction, and more recently by IHC detection of activated caspase-3, which represents the final enzymatic event leading to DNA fragmentation (Gown & Willingham 2002). There is agreement that a wave of apoptosis occurs in late luteal phase (Anderson et al. 1982, Williams et al. 1991), and that proliferative and apoptotic rates increase as epithelium progresses from normality to malignancy (Allan et al. 1992, Bai et al. 2001). Two studies of apoptosis and proliferation in normal breast epithelium from women with breast cancer and those undergoing benign breast biopsy for conditions such as fibroadenoma concluded that the ratio of proliferative to apoptotic indices is higher in women with breast cancer (Allan et al. 1992, Hassan & Walker 1998), suggesting that decreased elimination of epithelial cells may contribute to the development of malignancy. However, as pointed out by Anderson (1999) in a review of the subject, parity, lactation, contraceptive use, and age of the two groups were not controlled for, and all of these factors are known to influence cell kinetics in the normal breast. In addition, the method of measurement of apoptosis deserves some comment. Allan et al. used classic morphological criteria, whereas Hassan & Walker used a combination of in situ end-labeling and morphology. The apoptotic indices reported by these authors vary by an order of magnitude (0.1 to 1.2), compared with 0.3 reported in another study where morphology alone was used to identify apoptotic cells (Potten et al. 1988). Studies using TUNEL report values ranging from 0.0 (Bai et al. 2001) to 0.04 (Wong et al. 2001), to 2.1 per terminal duct lobular unit (Feuerhake et al. 2003). Using TUNEL, we have found values of 0.2% for premenopausal women, and 0.1% for postmenopausal women. Although we found no significant differences in median apoptosis and proliferative indices in breast cancer cases as opposed to benign disease controls, a multivariate model including TUNEL and Ki-67 LI, and menopausal status, yielded an OR of 3.66 (95% CI 1.2210.96) for the TUNEL index (Khan & Stickles 2000). Another study of normal breast epithelium and usual ductal hyperplasia on women with long-term follow-up also showed no predictive value of these measures for the subsequent development of malignancy, although ratios were not calculated (Mommers et al. 2001). Thus, although there has been widespread recognition that the study of apoptosis in the normal breast and pre-malignant lesions is important, normal breast studies have been hampered by methodological discrepancies, and as in studies of proliferation, the quantitation of apoptosis in large numbers of samples remains a problem today. The fact that apoptotic rates in normal epithelium and benign lesions are even lower than proliferative rates is another barrier to the inclusion of this parameter as a surrogate endpoint biomarker in studies of risk and prevention.
Inter-relationship between hormone response parameters in cytological samples
The ability to measure breast hormone levels in NAF and duct lavage fluid, and relate these to the cellular parameters discussed above provides an opportunity to test the paradigm presented at the beginning of this review. Based on this paradigm, we would expect a hierarchical relationship between estrogenic hormones, the fraction of ER
-positive cells, Ki-67 labeling, epithelial cell number and cytological atypia. We are presently conducting a study of high-risk women, where the DL effluent is separated into cells and supernatant, allowing analysis of both breast hormone levels and cellular parameters in the same samples. So far, we have been able to observe fragments of this hierarchy: hormonal parameters (particularly ES and DHEAS) relate significantly to cell number, and to cytological atypia; cell number and atypia are strongly inter-related, but the intermediary link with Ki-67 labeling is so far not evident. These women will be restudied after 6 months on tamoxifen therapy, and the same parameters re-examined, providing new data on the effects of tamoxifen on the endocrine environment and hormone responsiveness of the high-risk and normal breast.
| Conclusions |
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expression and proliferation. The former is an established therapeutic target, and may be of utility as a marker of risk and for selecting women for endocrine prevention strategies. The variability of the latter, at least as measured by Ki-67 labeling, is a significant concern and may ultimately prove to be a barrier to its utilization as a surrogate endpoint in prevention studies. The variability of apoptosis on repeat sampling has not been established, but the low proportion of apoptotic cells in breast epithelial samples, and the difficulties of quantitation related to this, makes it an unlikely surrogate endpoint. Additional studies are needed to establish the optimal menstrual cycle phase for breast epithelial sampling in premenopausal women, the variability of potential surrogate endpoints on repeat sampling in untreated women, and the variability of measurement of specific endpoints, particularly those that are present in small proportions of epithelial cells, such as proliferation and apoptosis. Additional work also needs to be done on the utility of nipple and duct fluid hormone concentrations, their reproducibility in untreated individuals, and their relationship to breast cancer risk. If validated, these are attractive candidates for intermediate biomarkers, particularly in studies of agents which modify local hormone synthesis in the breast.
| Acknowledgements |
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| References |
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