Mammogram image

Researchers may have found the earliest changes that occur in seemingly healthy breast tissue long before any tumours appear, according to a new study published today in the journal Nature Communications.

It seems that certain pathways in breast cells that are usually switched on by hormones during pregnancy are triggered by BRCA1 mutations and cause the cells to grow out of control.

Sara Pensa

The study, funded by Cancer Research UK, showed that before becoming cancerous, breast cells with the BRCA1 gene mutation undergo changes similar to those normally seen in late pregnancy.

Although this is early research, in the future doctors could screen women with BRCA1 mutations to monitor changes to their breast cells, which could help inform who might benefit from preventative surgery, and to give reassurance to those who can wait.

BRCA1 mutations significantly increase the risk of developing breast cancer at a younger age. Many women who discover they carry the faulty gene choose to have a preventative mastectomy. This involves surgically removing some or all of the healthy breast tissue, which can reduce but not eradicate the risk of developing breast cancer.

Not all women who have BRCA1 mutations will go on to develop cancer so for some, this life-changing surgery may be unnecessary, or could at least be delayed until early warning signs are spotted.

Researchers led by Karsten Bach and Dr Sara Pensa at the University of Cambridge wanted to develop a method to detect the early changes occurring in BRCA1-affected breast cells indicating that they are progressing towards breast cancer.  

The team analysed the mammary tissue of 15 mice at various ages carrying the BRCA1 mutation to look for changes in the tissue that were happening before the mice developed tumours.

The researchers found that having a BRCA1 mutation triggered certain pathways to be switched on in a type of stem cell called a luminal progenitor breast cell that are only activated during pregnancy. These messages tell the progenitor cell to turn into alveolar cells, which make up the chambers in the breast where milk-production takes place during late pregnancy.

Karsten Bach, co-author on the study and PhD student at the Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, said: “We thought we’d been given the wrong mice at first. Then we realised that having the BRCA1 mutation seemed to cause the cells in their breast tissue to behave as if the mouse was pregnant.

“The changes we saw happened very early on before any tumours were detected, so we reasoned that markers of these cellular changes could be used to monitor people who we know are at increased risk for breast cancer.”

Next the team analysed breast cells from 12 women who had a BRCA1 mutation and had undergone a preventative mastectomy.

Surprisingly, the team found that only 4 out of the 12 women had detectable levels of these markers of early stages of tumour initiation. This suggests that the majority of women may have been at lower risk of already being on the path towards tumour development when they had the surgery.

Dr Sara Pensa co-author and Senior Research Associate at the Department of Pharmacology and Wellcome-MRC Stem Cell Institute, said: “One of the mysteries surrounding BRCA gene mutations is how they increase a woman's risk of cancer so dramatically in the breast tissue, as opposed to say the kidneys or lung. It seems that certain pathways in breast cells that are usually switched on by hormones during pregnancy are triggered by BRCA1 mutations and cause the cells to grow out of control.”

Although this is early work and larger clinical trials will be needed, the researchers hope to build on their findings and develop a blood test to detect the early changes occurring in BRCA1 breast cells.

Researchers say in the future, doctors could screen at-risk women with BRCA1 mutations, and help them have informed conversations with women about their risk, guide decisions about preventative surgery, and to give reassurance to those considered not to need surgery at that time.

Michelle Mitchell, chief executive for Cancer Research UK, said: “The discovery of BRCA mutations gave much needed answers to families with a strong history of breast cancer. However, for women that carry the BRCA mutation that are yet to develop breast cancer, they face an incredibly difficult dilemma.  

“This is fascinating research, and we look forward to seeing the next steps, which could mean in the future, doctors could detect if women carrying these mutations have breast cells that are behaving differently. This could make a world of difference, as they may not need preventative surgery until later in life, or even at all.”

Reference

Bach K. & Pensa S. et al.'Time-resolved single-cell analysis of Brca1 associated mammary tumourigenesis reveals aberrant differentiation of luminal progenitors.' Nature Communications, March 2021.

Original press release by Cancer Research UK (CRUK).


Creative Commons License
The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Images, including our videos, are Copyright ©University of Cambridge and licensors/contributors as identified.  All rights reserved. We make our image and video content available in a number of ways – as here, on our main website under its Terms and conditions, and on a range of channels including social media that permit your use and sharing of our content under their respective Terms.