Abstract

The presence of the tumor in women with breast cancer provokes a profile of biochemical change characterized by hypoglycemia, hyperuremia and high levels of free fatty acids and ketone bodies in plasma. The total circulating levels of amino acids and lactate are slightly higher in patients with breast cancer. Moreover, alterations in the circulating levels of free and total fatty acids are associated with enhanced levels of total free fatty acids and significantly lower levels of esterified arachidonic acid. This profile may indicate a state of moderate catabolic activation in breast cancer patients and may also be associated with a slight mobilization of proteins and fatty acids by some of the peripheral tissues in order to cover the needs of the host and the tumor. However, the alteration in the distribution of different fatty acids (saturated, mono-unsaturated and poly-unsaturated) and the different behaviour of the free and esterified fractions may be the result of a greater release of only specific fatty acids by tumor or other host tissues, rather than a higher release of the whole spectrum of free fatty acids. Thus, it is proposed that some of the alterations may be directly related to localized tumor activity.

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