Identification of a Positive Association between Mammary Adipose Cholesterol Content and Indicators of Breast Cancer Aggressiveness in a French Population

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Abstract

Background: Several studies have recently highlighted important roles for adipose tissue in cancer. However, few have examined adipose tissue cholesterol, and no study has been performed in breast adipose tissue associated with breast tumors. Objectives: The present work was designed to determine if breast adipose tissue cholesterol from the tumorsurrounding area is associated with breast cancer aggressiveness. Methods: Between 2009 and 2011, 215 breast adipose tissue samples were collected at the Tours University Hospital (France) during surgery of women (aged 28-89 y) with invasive breast cancer. Associations of free cholesterol (FC), esterified cholesterol (EC), and total cholesterol (TC) amounts with clinical variables (age, BMI, and treated or untreated hypercholesterolemia) and tumor aggressiveness parameters [phenotype, grade, presence of inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), and multifocality] were tested using Student's t test and after ANOVA. Results: The predominant form of cholesterol in adipose tissue was FC, and 50% of patients had no detectable EC. The adipose tissue FC content (μg/mg total lipid) was 18% greater in patients >70 y old than in those 40- 49 y old (P < 0.05) and the TC content tended to be 12% greater in untreated hypercholesterolemic patients than in normocholesterolemic patients (P = 0.06). Breast adipose cholesterol concentrations were increased in tissues obtained from patients with human-epidermal-growth-factor-receptor-2 (HER2) phenotype (+13% FC; P < 0.05 compared with luminal A), IBC (+15% FC; P = 0.06 compared with noninflammatory tumors), as well as with multifocal triple-negative tumors (+34% FC, P < 0.05; +30% TC, P < 0.05, compared with unifocal triple-negative tumors). Among patients with triple-negative tumors, hypercholesterolemia was significantly more common (P < 0.05) in patients with multifocal tumors (64%) than in patients with unifocal tumors (25%). Conclusions: This study is the first of this magnitude that analyzes cholesterol concentrations in adipose tissue from female breast cancer patients. An increase in breast adipose tissue cholesterol content may contribute to breast cancer aggressiveness (HER2 phenotype, multifocality of triple-negative tumors, and IBC).

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Goupille, C., Ouldamer, L., Pinault, M., Guimares, C., Arbion, F., Jourdan, M. L., & Frank, P. G. (2021). Identification of a Positive Association between Mammary Adipose Cholesterol Content and Indicators of Breast Cancer Aggressiveness in a French Population. Journal of Nutrition, 151(5), 1119–1127. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxaa432

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