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Hormones Produced During Pregnancy Causes a Protein to Offset the Growth of Breast Cancer

by Savitha C Muppala on Nov 27 2009 2:07 PM

In a recent study, scientists found that hormones produced during pregnancy causes a protein to offset the growth of breast cancer.

In a recent study, scientists found that hormones produced during pregnancy causes a protein to offset the growth of breast cancer.

They say that protein, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), may serve as a viable, well-tolerated agent for the treatment and prevention of breast cancer.

"Hormones in pregnancy, such as estrogen, all induce AFP, which directly inhibits the growth of breast cancer," said lead researcher Herbert Jacobson, Ph.D., who is a basic breast cancer researcher in the Center for Immunology and Microbial Diseases and in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences at Albany Medical College, N.Y.

"The body has a natural defence system against breast cancer.

"AFP needs to be safely harnessed and developed into a drug that can be used to protect women from breast cancer," he added.

During the study, researchers sought to determine whether administering pregnancy hormones to carcinogen-exposed rats led them to produce AFP, which in turn produces the protective effect of pregnancy in the absence of pregnancy.

They found that treatment with estrogen plus progesterone, estrogen alone or human chorionic gonadotropin reduced the incidence of mammary cancers in rats.

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Furthermore, the researchers noted that each of these treatments elevated the serum level of AFP and that AFP directly inhibited the growth of breast cancer cells growing in culture, suggesting that these hormones of pregnancy are preventing breast cancer through their induction of AFP.

"The researchers have not directly demonstrated the cancer preventive activity of AFP, instead they found an association of these hormones preventing mammary tumors. None of these treatments prevented mammary tumors in 100 percent of the rats, it appears to delay mammary tumor formation and prevent breast cancer development in approximately 30 to 50 percent of the rats," Cancer Prevention Research Editorial Board Member Powel Brown, M.D., Ph.D..

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"This study is promising and suggests that additional animal studies need to be done before translation to humans. We may want to further test AFP for its cancer prevention activity," Brown added.

The study is published in Cancer Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

Source-ANI
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