Among women with breast cancer, there is wide variability in outcomes, both in treatment-related toxicities and disease-free survival (DFS). Primary predictors of DFS are those related to the extent of the disease and tumor characteristics, associated not only with tumor aggressiveness, but also responsiveness to targeted therapies. Inherited germline variation may also play a role in cancer treatment outcomes, and there have been studies targeting drug metabolism and other candidate pathways as well as genome-wide association studies (GWAS), which take a more agnostic approach and interrogate hundreds of thousands single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to determine those that modify response to breast cancer treatment. While this fi eld of pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics has held exciting promise for personalized medicine, the results have not been as consistent, or the effects as profound, as fi rst hoped. An emerging fi eld in studies of cancer prognosis is epigenetics, which regulates DNA expression and can be infl uenced by numerous biologic processes as well as environmental exposures. Although young, this fi eld of research likely holds promise for understanding of epigenetic mechanisms driving cancer and cancer outcomes, with a potential to modify these factors through drugs or other approaches. Finally, circulating markers in blood that refl ect some lifestyle factors have also been studies in relation to cancer outcomes, particularly Vitamin D. In this chapter, we highlight advances in the areas noted above, and comment on factors that can impact interpretation of results from observational studies. We also discuss future directions, and avenues necessary to move the fi eld forward.
CITATION STYLE
Ambrosone, C. B., Hong, C. C., & Goodwin, P. J. (2015). Host factors and risk of breast cancer recurrence: genetic, epigenetic and biologic factors and breast cancer outcomes. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 862, 143–153. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16366-6_10
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.