Abstract

BackgroundContradictory results have been reported regarding the association between leptin level and breast cancer. Therefore, a meta-analysis was performed to investigate this issue.MethodsPublished literature from PubMed and the Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) Database was retrieved. This study was performed based on different cases and control groups. The combined effect () with 95% confidence interval (CI) was calculated using fixed-effects or random-effects model analysis.ResultsOverall, the mean serum leptin level of case groups was significantly higher than that of control groups. A) For 9 studies comparing breast cancer cases and healthy controls the combined effect was 0.58 with 95% CI (0.48, 0.68). B) For 4 studies comparing premenopausal breast cancer cases and healthy controls the was 0.32 (0.12, 0.52). C) For 5 studies comparing postmenopausal cases and healthy controls the was 0.65 (0.46, 0.84). D) For 4 studies comparing breast cancer cases and breast benign controls the was 0.38 (0.17, 0.59). E) For 2 studies comparing premenopausal breast cancer cases and breast benign controls the was 0.33 (-0.25, 0.91). F) For 6 studies comparing postmenopausal breast cancer cases and breast benign controls the was 0.39 (0.19, 0.60). G) For 4 studies comparing lymph node metastasis positive cases and negative controls the was 0.72 (0.45, 1.00). H) For 3 studies comparing breast benign cases and healthy controls the was 0.71 (0.41, 1.01).ConclusionThis meta-analysis suggests that leptin level plays a role in breast cancer and has potential for development as a diagnostic tool.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most common cancer and the secondleading cause of cancer related death among women worldwide [1]

  • LEPR polymorphisms rs1137101 and rs1137100 were found to be significantly correlated with breast cancer risk; while LEPR polymorphisms rs8179183, rs4655537 and rs3762274 displayed no association with breast cancer [9]

  • Key characteristics of these studies are reported in Table 1. 2058 breast cancer patients, 2078 healthy controls and 285 breast benign controls were screened for the 23 studies included in this meta-analysis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the most common cancer and the secondleading cause of cancer related death among women worldwide [1]. The mechanism of how obesity relates to the development of breast cancer remains unclear. The association between polymorphism of obesity-related genes (LEP, LEPR and PON1) and breast cancer risk has been investigated [7,8,9]. He’s group [8] suggested that LEPR Gln223Arg might be a lowpenetrant risk for developing breast cancer, especially for black African women. LEPR polymorphisms rs1137101 and rs1137100 were found to be significantly correlated with breast cancer risk; while LEPR polymorphisms rs8179183, rs4655537 and rs3762274 displayed no association with breast cancer [9]. It appears that leptin might influence the development of breast cancer. A meta-analysis was performed to investigate this issue

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call