It has been shown that each manipulation of the mammary region, including breast surgery, may stimulate prolactin secretion. However, it has also been observed that in more than 50% of breast cancer patients surgical removal of the tumor is not followed by enhanced prolactin secretion. This might be indicative of an altered psychoneuroendocrine control of the mammary gland, which could lead to the onset of more biologically aggressive breast cancer. In fact, surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia has been proven to be associated with a better prognosis in terms of survival in node-negative breast cancer patients. The present study was performed to investigate the impact of postoperative hyperprolactinemia on the disease-free survival (DFS) of breast cancer patients with axillary node involvement. The study included 100 consecutive node-positive breast cancer patients who were followed for at least 10 years. Surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia occurred in 45/100 (45%) patients without any significant correlation with the main prognostic variables including number of involved nodes and ER status. The two groups of patients received the same adjuvant therapies. After a median follow-up of 151 months, the recurrence rate in patients with surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia was significantly lower than in patients with no postoperative hyperprolactinemia (23/45 vs 43/55, p<0.01). Moreover, DFS was significantly longer in hyperprolactinemic patients than in patients who had no enhanced secretion of prolactin postoperatively. In agreement with the results described previously in node-negative breast cancer, our study demonstrates the favorable prognostic significance of surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia in terms of DFS duration also in breast cancer patients with axillary node involvement, independent of the other well-known prognostic variables, thereby confirming that the psychoneuroendocrine status of cancer patients may influence the prognosis of their disease.

Bignami, A., Lissoni, P., Brivio, F., Galbiati, F., Pescia, S., Messina, G., et al. (2005). The favorable prognostic significance of surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia in node-positive breast cancer patients: ten-year disease-free survival results. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MARKERS, 20(1), 60-64 [10.1177/172460080502000109].

The favorable prognostic significance of surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia in node-positive breast cancer patients: ten-year disease-free survival results

GARDANI, GIANSTEFANO
2005

Abstract

It has been shown that each manipulation of the mammary region, including breast surgery, may stimulate prolactin secretion. However, it has also been observed that in more than 50% of breast cancer patients surgical removal of the tumor is not followed by enhanced prolactin secretion. This might be indicative of an altered psychoneuroendocrine control of the mammary gland, which could lead to the onset of more biologically aggressive breast cancer. In fact, surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia has been proven to be associated with a better prognosis in terms of survival in node-negative breast cancer patients. The present study was performed to investigate the impact of postoperative hyperprolactinemia on the disease-free survival (DFS) of breast cancer patients with axillary node involvement. The study included 100 consecutive node-positive breast cancer patients who were followed for at least 10 years. Surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia occurred in 45/100 (45%) patients without any significant correlation with the main prognostic variables including number of involved nodes and ER status. The two groups of patients received the same adjuvant therapies. After a median follow-up of 151 months, the recurrence rate in patients with surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia was significantly lower than in patients with no postoperative hyperprolactinemia (23/45 vs 43/55, p<0.01). Moreover, DFS was significantly longer in hyperprolactinemic patients than in patients who had no enhanced secretion of prolactin postoperatively. In agreement with the results described previously in node-negative breast cancer, our study demonstrates the favorable prognostic significance of surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia in terms of DFS duration also in breast cancer patients with axillary node involvement, independent of the other well-known prognostic variables, thereby confirming that the psychoneuroendocrine status of cancer patients may influence the prognosis of their disease.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
hyperprolactinemia, node-positive, cancer
English
2005
20
1
60
64
none
Bignami, A., Lissoni, P., Brivio, F., Galbiati, F., Pescia, S., Messina, G., et al. (2005). The favorable prognostic significance of surgery-induced hyperprolactinemia in node-positive breast cancer patients: ten-year disease-free survival results. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL MARKERS, 20(1), 60-64 [10.1177/172460080502000109].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/29668
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