Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in women and is widely known. Angiogenesis is the process through which new blood vessels develop from the body's current vascular system. It is essential for tumor growth, invasiveness, and metastasis, and so plays a pivotal role in the development of carcinoma. Proteolytic and proangiogenic catalyst activators and inhibitors regulate angiogenesis in a hierarchical fashion. The angiogenic process is largely under the direction of VEGF. In a select number of malignant tumors, the VEGF gene is overexpressed. The function of VEGF in angiogenesis has been the subject of intensive study in recent years. In breast cancer patients, VEGF plasma levels are highly predictive of tumor growth and survival. Several VEGF gene polymorphisms, have been identified to affect gene expression level in prior investigations. Epidemiological studies have linked polymorphisms in the VEGF gene to altered cancer risk, tumor growth, and metastasis. Previous research on VEGF polymorphism to evaluate the association between genes and breast cancer susceptibility was scant. The current review discusses the role of VEGF in the progression of breast cancer in addition to its promising usage as a predictive marker for breast cancer.

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