Does physical activity prevent breast cancer?
Epidemiologist McTiernan will continue her research into the cancer prevention benefits of physical activity.
McTiernan’s ongoing ACE clinical trial is investigating the ACute Effects of Exercise in Women by examining blood and muscle tissue samples before and after 45 minutes of either exercise or rest. With the new BCRF funding, she and co-investigator Dr. Catherine Duggan, will use those biospecimens to look for breast cancer biomarkers related to inflammation and blood vessel growth and determine whether the effects of exercise are different in normal-weight women and obese or overweight women. The study, which is still recruiting, will also look at how exercise affects cell growth in a 3D model of breast tumor cells, and how exercise affects BRCA1 and p53 gene expression in lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell.
“If we find that acute exercise significantly alters these biomarkers,” she said, “it could help support guidelines for daily exercise for breast cancer prevention and could indicate that exercise, even without weight loss, is beneficial.”
Eating habits, estrogen and breast density
Translational cancer prevention researcher Kensler will continue his work examining the impact of diet on breast cancer risk. In a collaboration with epidemiologist Dr. Holly Harris, Kensler will examine whether a diet associated with estrogen levels is associated with breast cancer risk. He and his team will also assess breast density in younger women (under age 40), examining the influence of estrogen levels measured in the blood on breast density. And they will examine how breast density and body fat distribution are related, which may help us understand how body size impacts breast cancer risk. The study will also look at how diet earlier in a woman’s life impacts breast density.
“Our goal is to identify actionable ways that we can reduce breast cancer risk through dietary patterns,” he said, “and the identification of factors that influence breast density.”
Metastatic biopsies: are they being done?
Manohar, a health services researcher with the Hutchinson Institute for Cancer Outcomes Research and a breast oncologist at SCCA, will study the real-world use of biopsy in metastatic breast cancer recurrence to make sure these patients are receiving the appropriate treatment. She wants to determine if second biopsies are being performed when patients recur.
“In early breast cancer, hormone status is a defining factor in choosing therapy,” she said. “But when there’s a metastatic recurrence, national guidelines call for another biopsy. This is because 20-30% of the time there’s a mismatch in hormone status between early and advanced, or metastatic cancer.”
Clinicians who rely on the original biopsy or pathology report to select treatment for a new metastatic tumor, she said, could hit the cancer with the wrong targeted treatment unless they re-biopsy.