Purpose: The majority of deaths from breast cancer occur following the development of metastatic disease, a process inhibited by β-blockers in preclinical studies. This phase II randomized controlled trial evaluated the effect of preoperative β-blockade with propranolol on biomarkers of metastatic potential and the immune cell profile within the primary tumor of patients with breast cancer.
Patients And Methods: In this triple-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial, 60 patients were randomly assigned to receive an escalating dose of oral propranolol ( = 30; 80-160 mg daily) or placebo ( = 30) for 7 days prior to surgery. The primary endpoint investigated the effect of propranolol on prometastatic and proinflammatory gene expression within the primary tumor.
Results: Propranolol downregulated primary tumor expression of mesenchymal genes ( = 0.002) without affecting epithelial gene expression ( = 0.21). Bioinformatic analyses implicated downregulation of Snail/Slug ( = 0.03), NF-κB/Rel ( < 0.01), and AP-1 ( < 0.01) transcription factors in structuring the observed transcriptome alterations, and identified changes in intratumoral neutrophil, natural killer cell, and dendritic cell recruitment (all < 0.01). Patients with clinical evidence of drug response (lowered heart rate and blood pressure) demonstrated elevated tumor infiltration of CD68 macrophages and CD8 T cells.
Conclusions: One week of β-blockade with propranolol reduced intratumoral mesenchymal polarization and promoted immune cell infiltration in early-stage surgically-resectable breast cancer. These results show that β-blockade reduces biomarkers associated with metastatic potential, and support the need for larger phase III clinical trials powered to detect the impact of β-blockade on cancer recurrence and survival..
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-19-2641 | DOI Listing |
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