AI Article Synopsis

  • Women with breast cancer often experience increased distress, linked to inflammation and worse health outcomes, prompting research into stress management interventions like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation training (RT).
  • A study tested the effects of a 5-week group-based intervention (CBT, RT, or health education control) on s100A8/A9 protein levels—a marker associated with tumor progress—in women undergoing breast cancer treatment.
  • Results showed that both CBT and RT led to significant reductions in s100A8/A9 levels over 12 months compared to the control group, indicating that improved stress management skills are crucial for minimizing inflammation and enhancing health outcomes in these patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Women with breast cancer (BCa) experience heightened distress, which is related to greater inflammation and poorer outcomes. The s100 protein family facilitates the inflammatory response by regulating myeloid cell function through the binding of Toll-like receptor 4 and the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE). The heterodimer s100A8/A9 RAGE ligand is associated with hastened tumor development and metastasis. Previously, a 10-week stress-management intervention using cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation training (RT) was associated with less leukocyte inflammatory gene expression in patients with BCa; however, its impact on s100A8/A9 was not examined. Because a 10-week intervention may be impractical during primary treatment for BCa, the authors developed briefer forms of CBT and RT and demonstrated their efficacy in reducing distress over 12 months of primary treatment. Here, the effects of these briefer interventions were tested effects on s100A8/A9 levels over the initial 12 months of BCa treatment.

Methods: Postsurgical patients with BCa (stage 0-IIIB) were randomized to a 5-week, group-based condition: CBT, RT, or health education control (HE). At baseline and at 12 months, women provided sera from which s100A8/A9 levels were determined using any enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

Results: Participants (mean age ± standard deviation, 54.81 ± 9.63 years) who were assigned to either CBT (n = 41) or RT (n = 38) had significant s100A8/A9 decreases over 12 months compared with those who were assigned to HE (n = 44; F  = 4.500; P = .036) controlling for age, stage, time since surgery, and receipt of chemotherapy or radiation. Greater increases in stress-management skills from preintervention to postintervention predicted greater reductions in s100A8/A9 levels over 12 months (β = -0.379; t  = -4.056; P < .001).

Conclusions: Brief, postsurgical, group-based stress management reduces RAGE-associated s100A8/A9 ligand levels during primary treatment for BCa.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6486408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cncr.31965DOI Listing

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