4.8 Article

Myocardial infarction accelerates breast cancer via innate immune reprogramming

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-0964-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute [P30CA016087]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R35HL135799, P01HL131478, P01HL131481, T32HL098129, K23HL125991, R01CA234025, R01CA129059, R01HL132073]
  3. NYU Cancer Institute Center Support Grant [NCIP30CA16087]
  4. NYU Shared Instrumentation Grant [S10 OD021747]
  5. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Support Grant/Core Grant [P30 CA008748]
  6. American Heart Association [19CDA34630066, 19POST34380010, 18CDA34110203, 20POST35080180]
  7. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [PJT159742]
  8. AKTIV Against Cancer
  9. Susan G. Komen Foundation [CCR18548032]
  10. Brain Tumor Funders' Collaborative
  11. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  12. Tier II Canada Research Chair in tumor microenvironment research

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Disruption of systemic homeostasis by either chronic or acute stressors, such as obesity(1)or surgery(2), alters cancer pathogenesis. Patients with cancer, particularly those with breast cancer, can be at increased risk of cardiovascular disease due to treatment toxicity and changes in lifestyle behaviors(3-5). While elevated risk and incidence of cardiovascular events in breast cancer is well established, whether such events impact cancer pathogenesis is not known. Here we show that myocardial infarction (MI) accelerates breast cancer outgrowth and cancer-specific mortality in mice and humans. In mouse models of breast cancer, MI epigenetically reprogrammed Ly6C(hi)monocytes in the bone marrow reservoir to an immunosuppressive phenotype that was maintained at the transcriptional level in monocytes in both the circulation and tumor. In parallel, MI increased circulating Ly6C(hi)monocyte levels and recruitment to tumors and depletion of these cells abrogated MI-induced tumor growth. Furthermore, patients with early-stage breast cancer who experienced cardiovascular events after cancer diagnosis had increased risk of recurrence and cancer-specific death. These preclinical and clinical results demonstrate that MI induces alterations in systemic homeostasis, triggering cross-disease communication that accelerates breast cancer. By reprogramming innate immune cells to an immunosuppressive phenotype, myocardial infarction accelerates breast cancer progression in mice, and the clinical relevance of these findings was demonstrated in individuals with early-stage breast cancer who experienced cardiovascular events after cancer diagnosis.

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