Estrogen and progesterone receptor gene polymorphisms and sporadic breast cancer risk: A Spanish case-control study

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Abstract

Estrogens, and to a lesser extent progesterones, influence the proliferation, differentiation and physiology of breast tissue as well as the development and progression of breast cancer. Genetic variants in the steroid hormone receptor genes ESR1 and PGR (belonging to the nuclear receptor superfamily) could therefore modify sporadic breast cancer susceptibility. Two studies have shown a protective effect associated with variants in ESR1 in 2 distinct populations. We studied 4 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in ESR1 and 4 in PGR in 550 consecutive and unrelated sporadic Spanish breast cancer patients and 564 healthy Spanish controls. We observed a dominant protective effect for the S10S variant in ESR1, with an estimated odds ratio (OR) of 0.75 (95% CI = 0.58-0.97; p = 0.03) although functional studies did not show changes in the RNA stability. A small subset of individuals carried a haplotype combination that corroborates this protection. No other SNP considered in either gene was found to be associated with sporadic breast cancer. Our results obtained in a European population confirm the protective role of the S10S variant in ESR1, previously reported in an Asian and a European-American population. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Fernández, L. P., Milne, R. L., Barroso, E., Cuadros, M., Arias, J. I., Ruibal, A., … Ribas, G. (2006). Estrogen and progesterone receptor gene polymorphisms and sporadic breast cancer risk: A Spanish case-control study. International Journal of Cancer, 119(2), 467–471. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.21847

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