Rethinking the carcinogenesis of breast cancer: The theory of breast cancer as a child deficiency disease or a pseudo semi-allograft
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15297Dato
2018-08-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The theory of breast cancer as a child deficiency disease is an inversion of the current paradigm, which considers fullterm pregnancies to be a protective factor and uses nulliparous women as the reference group. Instead, the
theory of breast cancer as a child deficiency disease says that women with the highest parity (about 20, which is
the limit of human fertility) are those with the lowest risk and should be used as the reference group in risk
estimations. This theory is explained biologically by converting parity from the simple value of number of
children into an understanding of the long-lasting biological and immunological effects of pregnancy. These
effects can be reflected, as measured by functional genomics, in gene expression of the immune cells in the
blood. Each pregnancy represents a unique fetus or semi-allograft, which provokes the creation and deposit of
memory cell clones in the mother. Gene expression levels have been found to change linearly with number of
full-term pregnancies in healthy women, but not in breast cancer patients. High hormone levels are necessary for a
successful pregnancy, as they modulate the immune response from adaptive to innate in order to protect the
fetus (considered as a semi-allograft) from rejection. At the end of the pregnancy, hormone levels drop, and the
immune system recognizes the semi-allograft, but not in time for rejection to occur before birth. High hormones
levels are also classified as carcinogens illustrating that carcinogenesis in the breast could be viewed as a war or
balance between later exposures to hormonal carcinogens and the protection of the immune system. We propose
that breast tumors are pseudo semi-allografts made up of transformed breast tissue cells. Assuming that the
sensitivity to the exposure to increased levels of endogenous or exogenous hormones in women with breast
cancer mimic those that occur in pregnancy, these breast tumor cells are protected against the body’s immune
reaction, just as the fetus is during pregnancy. However, with more pregnancies, the potential to eradicate the
pseudo semi-allograft might increase due to enhanced immune surveillance. The theory of breast cancer as a
child deficiency disease proposes that the protective effect of pregnancy on breast cancer incidence via the
immune system is independent of other risk factors.