Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (breast cancer)
160,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To define the role of asymptomatic autoimmune thyroiditis in the cause of breast cancer, the presence of circulating thyroid autoantibodies was studied in two populations, one with a high risk of breast cancer (British women) and one with a low risk (Japanese women). Ostensibly healthy women and patients with breast cancer from both countries were studied. There was no difference in the incidence of thyroid autoantibodies between women with breast cancer and healthy women in either race. The incidence of thyroid autoantibodies in healthy British women, however, was two to three times that in healthy Japanese women. The incidence of reticulin antibodies, was considerably higher in both groups of Japanese women. No remarkable differences in the incidence of antinuclear, smooth-muscle, antimitochondrial, gastric parietal cell, or liver-kidney microsomal antibodies were found between women with breast cancer and healthy women or between the two races. Only the incidence of antinuclear antibodies was marginally higher in Japanese patients with advanced cancer. These results indicate that asymptomatic autoimmune thyroid disease is more prevalent among British than among Japanese women, but they fail to provide direct evidence that autoimmune thyroid disease is associated with breast cancer. Prospective studies of women with autoimmune thyroiditis and studies of young women from low-risk and high-risk populations are needed.
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PMID:Thyroid and other autoantibodies in British and Japanese women: an epidemiological study of breast cancer. 108 57

Since the treatment of postmenopausal breast cancer patients with aminoglutethimide caused hypothyroidism with an unexpectedly high frequency previous treatment was suspected to contribute to hypofunction of the thyroid. Serum thyrotropin, triiodothyronine and free thyroxine index were compared between breast cancer patients who had undergone irradiation of regional lymph nodes and non-irradiated breast cancer patients, as well as patients having endometrial or colorectal carcinoma. Subclinical and clinical primary hypothyroidism was significantly more frequent in breast cancer patients who had previously received irradiation on supraclavicular lymph nodes comprising a minor part of the thyroid. Testing for the presence of autoantibodies against thyroid tissue components gave no evidence for radiation-induced autoimmune thyroiditis. Drugs suppressing thyroid hormone synthesis like aminoglutethimide may frequently cause myxedema in such irradiated women, especially at postmenopausal age.
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PMID:Primary hypothyroidism in breast cancer patients with irradiated supraclavicular lymph nodes. 399 9

The relationship between thyroid dysfunction and breast cancer (BC) is debated. To clarify this controversial issue, a prospective study on thyroid function in BC was performed. The prevalence of thyroid disease was examined in 102 consecutive BC patients with ductal infiltrating carcinoma after surgery and before starting any chemohormonal or x-ray therapy and in 100 age-matched control healthy women living in the same borderline iodine-sufficient geographic area. All subjects were submitted to clinical ultrasound thyroid evaluation and serum free T4, free T3, TSH, thyroperoxidase antibody, and thyroglobulin antibody determination. Fine needle aspiration was performed in all thyroid nodules. Estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER and PR, respectively) were assayed in 92 and 55 BC specimens, respectively. The overall prevalence of thyroid disease was 47 in 102 (46%) in BC patients and 14 in 100 (14%) in controls (P < 0.0001). The prevalence of nontoxic goiter was 27.4% in BC patients and 11% in controls (P = 0.003). Hashimoto's thyroiditis was found in 13.7% of BC patients and in only 2% of the controls (P < 0.005). Other thyroid disorders found in the BC group included 2 cases of Graves' disease, 2 of thyroid carcinoma, and 1 of subacute thyroiditis, whereas in the control group only 1 case of Graves' disease and none of the other disorders were found. Mean free T3, free T4, and TSH concentrations showed no difference between BC patients and controls. The prevalence of thyroperoxidase antibody was higher in BC patients than in controls (23.5% vs. 8%; P < 0.005), whereas the prevalence of thyroglobulin antibody was not different. In BC patients the presence of thyroid antibodies was more frequently associated with clinically detectable autoimmune thyroiditis (14 of 26, 51.8%; P = 0.03) and was more common in the younger group. The positivity of ER was found in 51 of 92 (55.43%) and that of PR was found in 26 of 55 (47.27%) BC specimens. No relationship was found among ER, PR status, and the presence of serum thyroid antibodies. In conclusion, 1) the present study provides evidence that the overall prevalence of thyroid disorders is increased in patients with breast cancer, and 2) thyroid autoimmune disorders, especially Hashimoto's thyroiditis, account to a large extent for the increased prevalence of thyroid disease in patients with breast cancer. This feature is independent from the ER and PR status of the primary tumor. The present findings call attention to the usefulness of screening for thyroid disease in any patient with breast cancer.
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PMID:Relationship between breast cancer and thyroid disease: relevance of autoimmune thyroid disorders in breast malignancy. 877 62

The aim of the study was to compare the prevalence of autoimmune thyroid diseases in three groups of women (66 with breast cancer (CaB), 68 with colorectal cancer (CaC) and 49 without oncological diseases as a control group). Serum levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), free thyroxin (fT4), antibodies to thyroglobulin (TGB-ab) and thyroperoxidase (TPO-ab) and tumor markers CEA, CA 15-3 and CA 19-9 were investigated in all subjects by using the chemiluminiscence method. In contrast to Graves' disease (no observed case), autoimmune thyroiditis was diagnosed in 24.2 % women with CaB (4.5 % euthyroid and 19.7 % with subclinical or overt hypothyroidism), compared to 16.7 % in women with CaC (2.0 % euthyroid and 14.7 % with subclinical or overt hypothyroidism) and 16.2 % controls (4.0 % euthyroid and 12.2 % with subclinical or overt hypothyroidism). Serum levels of TGB-ab were higher in the group with breast cancer as compared to those with colorectal cancer and the control group (medians: 35.80 vs. 31.75 vs. 27.70, p<0.001). Similarly, the percentage of positive TGB-ab and TPO-ab serum levels was higher in women with breast cancer as compared to those with colorectal cancer and the control group. The results of the study support the controversial theory that there is an increased prevalence of autoimmune thyroiditis in women with breast cancer.
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PMID:Autoimmune thyroid diseases in women with breast cancer and colorectal cancer. 1558 39

An association between thyroid autoimmunity and breast cancer (BC) has been consistently reported, but the cause of this association is still unknown. The role of lymphocytic infiltration (LI) in breast tumorigenesis is controversial and several data suggest that in BC an increase of lymphoid cell infiltrates or a dysfunctional local immune response may be detected very early during tumor development. Chronic autoimmune thyroiditis is characterized by different degrees of LI in thyroid gland and BC cells share some antigenic properties similar to those detected in thyroid tissue, such as sodium iodide symporter (NIS) and peroxidase activity. The aim of this study was to evaluate the frequency and amount of LI in malignant and in normal peritumoral breast tissues, as expression of autoimmune morphological changes, in a group of BC patients with thyroid autoimmunity. We suppose that an increased LI in breast tissues of this group of patients may help explain the association between BC and thyroid autoimmunity. The study group included 26 BC patients with thyroperoxidase antibodies positivity (TPOAb+), 14 of them (53.8%) with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT), and 30 BC patients with no evidence of thyroid autoimmune disorders. Malignant and surrounding normal breast tissues were assessed for LI. The amount of LI was scored as very scanty or scanty (LI S) and moderate or marked (LI M), independently by two expert pathologists. LI S was detected in 19/26 (73.1%) BC tissues from patients with TPOAb positivity and LI M in 7 (26.9%). All BC patients with HT had LI S. LI S was detected in 25/30 (83%) and LI M in 5/30 (17%) of BC tissue from patients with no thyroid autoimmunity. The difference in the amount of LI of BC tissues in patient with or without autoimmune thyroid disorders was not significant. The LI was generally absent or very scanty in remote breast tissue in all cases. In conclusion, in breast malignancies the presence of humoral and/or clinical evidence of thyroid autoimmunity is not associated to autoimmune morphological changes of cancer and peritumoral normal tissue. The LI does not seem to have any role in tumorigenesis in patients with BC and thyroid autoimmunity.
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PMID:Association between breast cancer and autoimmune thyroid disorders: no increase of lymphocytic infiltrates in breast malignant tissues. 1668 39

Improving cancer immunotherapy by targeting T cell network also triggers autoimmunity. We disrupted regulatory T cell (Treg) function to probe the balance between breast cancer vaccination and autoimmune thyroiditis (EAT) in four models, with particular attention to MHC-associated susceptibility, EAT induction with mouse thyroglobulin (mTg) without adjuvant, and tolerance to Her-2/neu in transgenic mice. 1) In EAT-resistant BALB/c mice, Treg depletion enhanced tumor regression, and facilitated mild thyroiditis induction. 2) In Her-2 tolerant C57BL/6 mice expressing HLA-DR3, an EAT-susceptibility allele, Her-2 DNA vaccinations must follow Treg depletion for (Her-2xDR3)F(1) mice to resist tumor challenge; thyroiditis incidence was moderated by the EAT-resistant IA(b) allele. 3) In neu tolerant, EAT-resistant BALB/c mice, implanted neu(+) tumor also regressed only after Treg depletion and DNA vaccinations. Tumor immunity was long-term, providing protection from spontaneous tumorigenesis. In all three, immune stimuli from concurrent tumor regression and EAT development have a noticeable, mutually augmenting effect. 4) In Treg-depleted, EAT-susceptible CBA/J mice, strong tumor protection was established by immunization with a cell vaccine. mTg injections led to greater thyroiditis incidence and severity. Combination models with MHC class II diversity should facilitate autoimmunity risk assessment and management while generating tumor immunity.
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PMID:Autoimmune thyroiditis as an indicator of autoimmune sequelae during cancer immunotherapy. 1925 81

The controversial relationship between benign thyroid diseases and breast cancer (BC) has been investigated for over 50 years. Despite extensive population studies, the results as a whole have been inconsistent. The purpose of this study was to collate and analyse available data, calculating a pooled odds ratio (OR) of the risk of BC in patients diagnosed with benign thyroid diseases. Studies were obtained from a database search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, PubMed, Current Contents Connect and Google Scholar with additional cross checking of reference lists. Inclusion criteria required a confirmed diagnosis of a benign thyroid disease, reporting of an OR or data to calculate an OR (and 95% confidence interval, CI) and the use of an internal control group as the comparator. Collated data was assessed for heterogeneity and a pooled OR calculated. 28 studies were included in the meta-analysis. There was significant evidence of an increased risk of BC in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, evident in a pooled OR 2.92 (95% CI 2.13-4.01). In addition, the results supported an increased risk associated with the presence of anti-thyroid antibodies (OR 2.02, 95% CI 1.63-2.50) and goitre (OR 2.26, 95% CI 1.39-3.69). Subgroup analysis of antibody presence revealed increased risk associated with both anti-TPO (OR 2.64, 95% CI 1.82-3.83) and anti-TG (2.71, 95% CI 1.58-4.69). Quantitative analysis of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism was not significant. While these results indicate an association between thyroid auto-immunity and BC, further prospective studies are required to definitively prove causality.
Breast Cancer Res Treat 2012 Jun
PMID:Benign thyroid disease is associated with breast cancer: a meta-analysis. 2243 24