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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The involvement of lipid enzymes in the action of oncogenes at the cell membrane level has suggested that membrane lipids could play a role in modulating the growth of tumors. We previously found that breast cancer patients with a low level of polyunsaturated fatty acids in their
primary tumor
's phosphatidylethanolamine had a high risk of early occurrence of visceral metastasis. In the present study, we prospectively examined whether fatty acid composition of tumor membrane phosphatidylcholine had a prognostic significance in a series of 63 patients with a localized presentation of breast cancer. Membrane phospholipids were extracted from the carcinoma tissue obtained at the time of surgery, phosphatidylcholine was purified, and its fatty acids were analyzed by capillary gas chromatography. During the follow-up period, 20 patients developed metastasis. In these patients, the proportion of
stearic acid
containing phosphatidylcholine was significantly lower than it was in the tumors of the 43 patients who remained metastasis-free. Multivariate analysis according to Cox showed that low
stearic acid
level in tumor phosphatidylcholine and high mitotic index were independently predictive of subsequent metastasis. The predictive value of
stearic acid
level on metastasis risk was higher in node-positive patients than in node-negative patients, allowing individualization of a subgroup of low
stearic acid
level, node-positive patients with very poor prognosis. We concluded that
stearic acid
level in tumor membrane phosphatidylcholine is an independent intra-tumor marker of breast cancer prognosis. This finding is new evidence that tumor's structural lipids are linked to the growth of breast cancer.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of tumor phosphatidylcholine stearic acid level in breast carcinoma. 157 71
Stearate
is an 18-carbon saturated fatty acid found in many foods in the western diet, including beef and chocolate.
Stearate
has been shown to have anti-cancer properties during early stages of neoplastic progression. However, previous studies have not investigated the effect of dietary stearate on breast cancer metastasis. In this study, we present evidence that exogenously supplied dietary stearate dramatically reduces the size of tumors that formed from injected human breast cancer cells within the mammary fat pads of athymic nude mice by approximately 50% and partially inhibits breast cancer cell metastasis burden in the lungs in this mouse model system. This metastatic inhibition appears to be independent of
primary tumor
size, as stearate fed animals that had primary tumors comparable in size to littermates fed either a safflower oil enriched diet or a low fat diet had reduced lung metastasis. Also stearate fed mice sub-groups had different
primary tumor
sizes but no difference in metastasis. This anti-metastasis effect may be due, at least in part, to the ability of stearate to induce apoptosis in these human breast cancer cells. Overall, this study suggests the possibility of dietary manipulation with selected long-chain saturated fatty acids such as stearate as a potential adjuvant therapeutic strategy for breast cancer patients wishing to maximize the suppression of metastatic disease.
...
PMID:Dietary stearate reduces human breast cancer metastasis burden in athymic nude mice. 1926 49