The research, undertaken by the Department of Women’s Cancer at UCL and led by Professors Martin Widschwendter and Andrew Teschendorff, aims to decode how the most common women’s cancer — breast cancer — develops. Previous research has shown that there are key risk factors associated with an increased risk of cancer development. These include, a family history of breast cancer, starting periods early or entering menopause late. These
The epigenome refers to the cells’ software which gives all the different cells in our body their identity, and are vital to an individual’s normal health and development. They consist of a series of processes which control the accessibility of our DNA sequence and as such influence the interpretation of the genome and fate of the affected cell. These new findings significantly move our understanding forward and is consistent with the view that an altered epigenetic program, which limits the ability of cells to differentiate predisposes them to the development of breast cancer. Researchers analysed a total of 668 breast tissue samples, including samples from women without cancer, normal breast and cancer tissue from women with a cancer, as well as an independent set of
Furthermore, those cases of breast cancer which were exhibiting epigenetic changes were associated with significantly poorer prognosis and a decreased level of survivorship from the disease. Professor Martin Widschwendter, Head of Department of Women’s Cancer at University College London said: «These new findings are important in supporting further research into women’s cancer development and prevention. We are working hard to understand the risk factors associated with epigenetic changes in normal breast tissue and how these pre dispose a woman to cancer. The application of these altered epigenetic signatures hold the key developing new interventions that could ‘switch off’ this epigenetic defect and hold the key to preventing cancer development." Professor Andrew Teschendorff, Lead Computational Biologist at the Department of Women’s Cancer at the University College London said: «These new data show how epigenetic alterations, if detected early enough, could be used to identify women at higher risk of developing breast cancer. Since epigenetic alterations are reversible, it offers the potential to design preventive strategies. Our work further highlights the importance of
Executive of The Eve Appeal said: «Stopping women’s cancers before they start is the ambition of our research programme. In order to do this we need to track cancer development right back to its earliest development and understand how it starts. This research is an important step towards understanding how molecular changes in healthy tissue can be detected. Once we can identify these changes we can then move on to developing ways to revert them.»
Source: https://www.eveappeal.org.uk/media/265781/nature_comms_press_release_-_final.pdf