To identify the factors associated with DCIS and IBC risk, the team focused not on the lesions themselves but on the surrounding adipose tissue. Obesity and enlarged adipocytes (fat cells) in the breast have been associated with DCIS. However, the role of adipose tissue in the development of IBC in people with DCIS had not previously been explored.
The study’s lead author, Mathilde Almekinders, then a PhD student on the PRECISION team, had the idea of studying the adipocytes surrounding the breast ducts. “Despite being able to influence the behaviour of their neighbouring cells, adipocytes are not typically the focus of breast cancer studies,” Mathilde explains. “But fat tissue is a major component of the breast. It’s not just a storage organ – it has many functions, including in the endocrine and immune systems.”
As reported in npj Breast Cancer, the team used digital pathology to analyse breast adipocyte features in a nested case-control study of patients diagnosed with primary DCIS who had different health outcomes. A combination of both large breast adipocytes and high expression of the COX-2 protein, rather than smaller adipocytes and low COX-2 expression, was associated with a 12-fold-higher risk of subsequent invasive IBC.
“Findings like these bring us closer to solving our Cancer Grand Challenge and our vision of understanding harmless versus hazardous disease,” says Jelle Wesseling, PRECISION team lead based at the Netherlands Cancer Institute. Next, the team will cross-validate these findings in cohorts, including their own and those from the STORMing Cancer team.