Adipocytokines and Insulin Resistance: Their Role as Benign Breast Disease and Breast Cancer Risk Factors in a High-Prevalence Overweight-Obesity Group of Women over 40 Years Old

Author:

Sat-Muñoz DanielORCID,Martínez-Herrera Brenda-EugeniaORCID,Quiroga-Morales Luis-Aarón,Trujillo-Hernández Benjamín,González-Rodríguez Javier-Andrés,Gutiérrez-Rodríguez Leonardo-Xicotencatl,Leal-Cortés Caridad-Aurea,Portilla-de-Buen Eliseo,Rubio-Jurado Benjamín,Salazar-Páramo Mario,Gómez-Sánchez Eduardo,Delgadillo-Cristerna Raúl,Carrillo-Nuñez Gabriela-Guadalupe,Nava-Zavala Arnulfo-HernánORCID,Balderas-Peña Luz-Ma-Adriana

Abstract

Insulin levels, adipocytokines, and inflammatory mediators trigger benign breast disease (BBD) and breast cancer (BC). The relationship between serum adipocytokines levels, overweight-obesity, metabolic disturbs, and BC is unclear. Methods: To analyze the serum levels of the adipocytokines, insulin, and the HOMA IR in women without breast disease, with BBD or BC, and the role of these as risk factors for benign breast disease or breast cancer. Results: Adipsin values > 0.91 and visfatin levels > 1.18 ng/mL represent a risk factor to develop BBD in NBD lean women (OR = 18; and OR = 12). Data in overweight-obese women groups confirm the observation due to insulin levels > 2.6 mU/mL and HOMA IR > 0.78, with OR = 60.2 and 18, respectively; adipsin OR = 26.4, visfatin OR = 12. Breast cancer risk showed a similar behavior: Adipsin risk, adjusted by insulin and visfatin OR = 56 or HOMA IR and visfatin OR = 22.7. Conclusion: Adipose tissue is crucial for premalignant and malignant tissue transformation in women with overweight-obesity. The adipocyte–breast epithelium interaction could trigger a malignant transformation in a continuum, starting with BBD as premalignant disease, especially in overweight-obese women.

Funder

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social. Fondo de Investigación en Salud

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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