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The Other Side of the Coin: May Androgens Have a Role in Breast Cancer Risk?

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010424

Keywords

androgens; dihydrotestosterone; androgen receptor; breast; breast cancer; breast cancer risk

Funding

  1. Ministero Istruzione Universita e Ricerca-MIUR

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This article reviews the challenges of breast cancer prevention and highlights the role of steroid hormones and their receptors in the development of the disease. It specifically focuses on the impact of androgens and their receptor on breast tissue and their correlation to breast cancer risk factors.
Breast cancer prevention is a major challenge worldwide. During the last few years, efforts have been made to identify molecular breast tissue factors that could be linked to an increased risk of developing the disease in healthy women. In this concern, steroid hormones and their receptors are key players since they are deeply involved in the growth, development and lifetime changes of the mammary gland and play a crucial role in breast cancer development and progression. In particular, androgens, by binding their own receptor, seem to exert a dichotomous effect, as they reduce cell proliferation in estrogen receptor alpha positive (ER alpha+) breast cancers while promoting tumour growth in the ERoc negative ones. Despite this intricate role in cancer, very little is known about the impact of androgen receptor (AR)-mediated signalling on normal breast tissue and its correlation to breast cancer risk factors. Through an accurate collection of experimental and epidemiological studies, this review aims to elucidate whether androgens might influence the susceptibility for breast cancer. Moreover, the possibility to exploit the AR as a useful marker to predict the disease will be also evaluated.

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