Cargando…

Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine

BACKGROUND: Thyroid hormones have been shown to regulate breast cancer cells growth, the absence or reduction of thyroid hormones in cells could provoke a proliferation arrest in G0-G1 or weak mitochondrial activity, which makes cells insensitive to therapies for cancers through transforming into lo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Huang, Jianbo, Jin, Liangbin, Ji, Guangyan, Xing, Lei, Xu, Chaobo, Xiong, Xiong, Li, Hongyuan, Wu, Kainan, Ren, Guosheng, Kong, Lingquan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3717040/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23829347
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-334
_version_ 1782277646617411584
author Huang, Jianbo
Jin, Liangbin
Ji, Guangyan
Xing, Lei
Xu, Chaobo
Xiong, Xiong
Li, Hongyuan
Wu, Kainan
Ren, Guosheng
Kong, Lingquan
author_facet Huang, Jianbo
Jin, Liangbin
Ji, Guangyan
Xing, Lei
Xu, Chaobo
Xiong, Xiong
Li, Hongyuan
Wu, Kainan
Ren, Guosheng
Kong, Lingquan
author_sort Huang, Jianbo
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Thyroid hormones have been shown to regulate breast cancer cells growth, the absence or reduction of thyroid hormones in cells could provoke a proliferation arrest in G0-G1 or weak mitochondrial activity, which makes cells insensitive to therapies for cancers through transforming into low metabolism status. This biological phenomenon may help explain why treatment efficacy and prognosis vary among breast cancer patients having hypothyroid, hyperthyroid and normal function. Nevertheless, the abnormal thyroid function in breast cancer patients has been considered being mainly caused by thyroid diseases, few studied influence of chemotherapy on thyroid function and whether its alteration during chemotherapy can influence the respose to chemotherapy is still unclear. So, we aimed to find the alterations of thyroid function and non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS) prevalence druing chemotherapy in breast cancer patients, and investigate the influence of thyroid hormones on chemotherapeutic efficacy. METHODS: Thyroid hormones and NTIS prevalence at initial diagnosis and during chemotherapy were analyzed in 685 breast diseases patients (369 breast cancer, 316 breast benign lesions). The influence of thyroid hormones on chemotherapeutic efficacy was evaluated by chemosensitization test, to compare chemotherapeutic efficacy between breast cancer cells with chemotherapeutics plus triiodothyronine (T(3)) and chemotherapeutics only. RESULTS: In breast cancer, NTIS prevalence at the initial diagnosis was higher and increased during chemotherapy, but declined before the next chemotherapeutic course. Thyroid hormones decreased signigicantly during chemotherapy. T(3) can enhance the chemosensitivity of MCF-7 to 5-Fu and taxol, with progression from G0-G1 phase to S phase. The similar chemosensitization role of T(3) were found in MDA-MB-231. We compared chemotherapeutic efficacy among groups with different usage modes of T(3), finding pretreatment with lower dose of T(3), using higher dose of T(3) together with 5-Fu or during chemotherapy with 5-Fu were all available to achieve chemosensitization, but pretreatment with lower dose of T(3) until the end of chemotherapy may be a safer and more efficient therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, thyroid hormones decreasing during chemotherapy was found in lots of breast cancer patients. On the other hand, thyroid hormones can enhance the chemotherapeutic efficacy through gatherring tumor cells in actively proliferating stage, which may provide a new adjuvant therapy for breast cancer in furture, especially for those have hypothyroidism during chemotherapy.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3717040
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37170402013-07-21 Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine Huang, Jianbo Jin, Liangbin Ji, Guangyan Xing, Lei Xu, Chaobo Xiong, Xiong Li, Hongyuan Wu, Kainan Ren, Guosheng Kong, Lingquan BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: Thyroid hormones have been shown to regulate breast cancer cells growth, the absence or reduction of thyroid hormones in cells could provoke a proliferation arrest in G0-G1 or weak mitochondrial activity, which makes cells insensitive to therapies for cancers through transforming into low metabolism status. This biological phenomenon may help explain why treatment efficacy and prognosis vary among breast cancer patients having hypothyroid, hyperthyroid and normal function. Nevertheless, the abnormal thyroid function in breast cancer patients has been considered being mainly caused by thyroid diseases, few studied influence of chemotherapy on thyroid function and whether its alteration during chemotherapy can influence the respose to chemotherapy is still unclear. So, we aimed to find the alterations of thyroid function and non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS) prevalence druing chemotherapy in breast cancer patients, and investigate the influence of thyroid hormones on chemotherapeutic efficacy. METHODS: Thyroid hormones and NTIS prevalence at initial diagnosis and during chemotherapy were analyzed in 685 breast diseases patients (369 breast cancer, 316 breast benign lesions). The influence of thyroid hormones on chemotherapeutic efficacy was evaluated by chemosensitization test, to compare chemotherapeutic efficacy between breast cancer cells with chemotherapeutics plus triiodothyronine (T(3)) and chemotherapeutics only. RESULTS: In breast cancer, NTIS prevalence at the initial diagnosis was higher and increased during chemotherapy, but declined before the next chemotherapeutic course. Thyroid hormones decreased signigicantly during chemotherapy. T(3) can enhance the chemosensitivity of MCF-7 to 5-Fu and taxol, with progression from G0-G1 phase to S phase. The similar chemosensitization role of T(3) were found in MDA-MB-231. We compared chemotherapeutic efficacy among groups with different usage modes of T(3), finding pretreatment with lower dose of T(3), using higher dose of T(3) together with 5-Fu or during chemotherapy with 5-Fu were all available to achieve chemosensitization, but pretreatment with lower dose of T(3) until the end of chemotherapy may be a safer and more efficient therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, thyroid hormones decreasing during chemotherapy was found in lots of breast cancer patients. On the other hand, thyroid hormones can enhance the chemotherapeutic efficacy through gatherring tumor cells in actively proliferating stage, which may provide a new adjuvant therapy for breast cancer in furture, especially for those have hypothyroidism during chemotherapy. BioMed Central 2013-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3717040/ /pubmed/23829347 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-334 Text en Copyright © 2013 Huang et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huang, Jianbo
Jin, Liangbin
Ji, Guangyan
Xing, Lei
Xu, Chaobo
Xiong, Xiong
Li, Hongyuan
Wu, Kainan
Ren, Guosheng
Kong, Lingquan
Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
title Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
title_full Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
title_fullStr Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
title_full_unstemmed Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
title_short Implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
title_sort implication from thyroid function decreasing during chemotherapy in breast cancer patients: chemosensitization role of triiodothyronine
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3717040/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23829347
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-13-334
work_keys_str_mv AT huangjianbo implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT jinliangbin implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT jiguangyan implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT xinglei implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT xuchaobo implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT xiongxiong implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT lihongyuan implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT wukainan implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT renguosheng implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine
AT konglingquan implicationfromthyroidfunctiondecreasingduringchemotherapyinbreastcancerpatientschemosensitizationroleoftriiodothyronine