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  • Enterolactone concentrations and prognosis after postmenopausal breast cancer: assessment of effect modification and meta-analysis.

Enterolactone concentrations and prognosis after postmenopausal breast cancer: assessment of effect modification and meta-analysis.

International journal of cancer (2014-01-18)
Petra Seibold, Alina Vrieling, Theron S Johnson, Katharina Buck, Sabine Behrens, Rudolf Kaaks, Jakob Linseisen, Nadia Obi, Judith Heinz, Dieter Flesch-Janys, Jenny Chang-Claude
ABSTRACT

We previously reported that high concentrations of enterolactone, a lignan metabolite, are associated with lower mortality in 1,140 breast cancer patients from Germany. Using an extended set of 2,182 patients aged 50-74 years at diagnosis (2001-2005) and prospectively followed up until 2009, we investigated whether the association with mortality differs by lifestyle factors and tumor characteristics. Hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were estimated using multivariable Cox regression. Potential differential effects by tumor characteristics and lifestyle factors were assessed and a meta-analysis of five studies addressing lignan exposure and breast cancer prognosis was performed to summarize evidence. Median enterolactone concentrations were 17.4 (± 30.5 standard deviation) and 22.9 nmol L(-1) (± 44.8), respectively, for 269 deceased and 1,913 patients still alive. High enterolactone concentrations were significantly associated with lower all-cause mortality (per 10 nmol L(-1) : HR 0.94, 95% CI 0.90-0.98), breast cancer-specific mortality (HR 0.94, 0.89-0.99), and distant disease-free survival (HR 0.94, 0.90-0.98). Associations were found for stage 0-IIIA but not for stage IIIB-IV disease (p(het) = 0.01) and were stronger in patients with BMI <25 kg m(-2) than those with BMI ≥ 25 (p(het) = 0.04). In patients with healthy lifestyle (BMI <25, nonsmoker, physically active), the inverse association with all-cause mortality was still apparent (HR 0.92, 0.85-0.99). The meta-analysis yielded significant associations both for all-cause (HR 0.57, 0.42-0.78) and breast cancer-specific mortality (HR 0.54, 0.39-0.75). Our findings show that high lignan exposure is associated with reduced mortality in breast cancer patients. The inverse association observed in this study cannot be entirely explained by a healthy lifestyle.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Enterolactone, ~95% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
γ-Butyrolactone, ReagentPlus®, ≥99%
Supelco
γ-Butyrolactone, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
4-Hydroxybutanoic acid lactone, ≥98%, FCC, FG