Abstract

Breast cancer (BrCA) is the most common cancer affecting women around the world. However, it does not arise from the same causative agent among all women. Genetic markers have been associated with heritable or familial breast cancers, which may or may not be confounded by environmental factors, whereas sporadic breast cancer cases are more likely attributable to environmental exposures. Approximately 85% of women diagnosed with BrCA have no family history of the disease. Given this overwhelming bias, more plausible etiologic mechanisms should be investigated to accurately assess a woman’s risk of acquiring breast cancer. It is known that breast cancer risk is highly influenced by exogenous environmental cues altering cancer genes either by genotoxic mechanisms (DNA mutations) or otherwise. Risk assessment should comprehensively incorporate exposures to exogenous factors that are linked to a woman’s individual susceptibility. However, the exact role that some environmental agents (EA) play in tumor formation and/or cancer gene regulation is unclear. In this pilot project, we begin a multi-disciplinary approach to investigate the intersection of environmental exposures, cancer gene response, and BrCA risk. Here, we present data that show environmental exposure to heavy metals and PCBs in drinking water, heavy metal presence in plasma of nine patients with sporadic BrCA, and Toxic Release Inventory and geological data for a metal of concern, uranium, in Northeast Georgia.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer (BrCA) has been the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women in the United States for several decades, we are still unraveling its highly varied etiology, which is dependent upon the interactions of exogenous exposures with endogenous genetic predispositions

  • We presented data that show environmental exposure to heavy metals and PCBs in drinking water, heavy metal presence in plasma of nine patients with sporadic breast cancer (BrCA), and Toxic Release

  • We presented data that show environmental exposure to heavy metals and PCBs in drinking water, heavy metal presence in plasma of nine patients with sporadic BrCA, and Toxic Release Inventory and geological data for a metal of concern, uranium, in Northeast Georgia

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer (BrCA) has been the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women in the United States for several decades (one out of eight women will be diagnosed during their lifetime), we are still unraveling its highly varied etiology, which is dependent upon the interactions of exogenous exposures with endogenous genetic predispositions. A notable body of work associates mutations of specific genes with an increased incidence of familial BrCA syndromes. Of BrCA cases in the United States each year are sporadic, suggesting that the causes arise from a non-heritable source [1]. One potential important mechanism in sporadic BrCA is environmental exposures. We are aware of the relationship between estrogenic responses to BrCAs and. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 15683–15691; doi:10.3390/ijerph121215013 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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