Abstract

Breast cancer is becoming more common in young adults. The relationships between blood lipids and breast cancer have been widely studied in recent years. In our current study, we investigated the potential correlations between blood lipids and clinicopathological features of breast cancer in young females. Fifty-nine young adults (40 years or younger) with pathologically confirmed invasive breast cancer that were treated in our center from October 2015 to March 2020 were enrolled in this study. These patients were divided into the negative group (n=40, with normal blood lipids) and positive group (n=19, with abnormal blood lipids) according to the preoperative blood lipid profiles, and differences in the clinicopathological features were compared between these two groups. Compared with the negative group, the positive group had a significantly higher rate of lymph node positivity (P=0.034); compared with the positive group, the negative group had a significantly higher rate of HER2 positivity (P=0.029). However, these two groups showed no significant difference in tumor size, molecular type, clinical stage, histological grade, tumor thrombus, and Ki-67 index (P values were 0.071, 0.227, 0.593, 0.396, 0.198, and 0.593, respectively). Blood lipid level has a certain correlation with lymph node metastasis and HER2 expression in young breast cancer patients. Therefore, blood lipid levels has a certain reference value in the clinical treatment of breast cancer.

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