Abstract

The concentrations of 17β-estradiol, estrone, testosterone (T), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, androstenedione (A), cortisol and prolactin (PRL) were determined in the peripheral venous blood and in the lateral thoracic vein of 14 premenopausal and 34 postmenopausal women who underwent surgery for a breast carcinoma. The difference between the two blood samples, defined as concentration gradient across the cancerous breast, was calculated for all hormones. A significant peripheral-local concentration gradient was found for DHEA and A both in pre- and postmenopausal patients, whereas for T it was observed only in postmenopausal subjects. Furthermore, DHEA and A gradients were correlated to the presence of estrogen receptors as determined by a radioligand binding assay. An inverse relationship between DHEA gradient and the expression of estrogen receptors was observed in premenopausal women, whereas in postmenopausal patients an opposite, although not significant, trend was found. These results suggest that in the cancerous breast: (1) DHEA, A and T (the latter only in postmenopause) could be taken up from plasma, and thus there could be a storage of these steroids inside the breast tissue and/or perhaps some alterations in their local metabolism; (2) androgens could play a different role in breast carcinogenesis in relation to the estrogen circulating levels and to the expression of estrogen receptors.

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