The role of ovarian sex steroids in metabolic homeostasis, obesity, and postmenopausal breast cancer: molecular mechanisms and therapeutic implications.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review the molecular actions of estrogen and progesterone and their roles in obesity, inflammation, and postmenopausal breast cancer, including the impact of a high-fat diet.
Results Summary
The abstract suggests that a high-fat diet, combined with decreased physical activity and hormonal changes, contributes to obesity in postmenopausal women, which may increase breast cancer risk through mechanisms like inflammation and altered metabolism.
Population
Obese postmenopausal women
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
withdrawal of estrogen and progesterone | neutral | homeostasis imbalances | postmenopausal women | - | causes | #1 |
withdrawal of estrogen and progesterone | decrease | decreases in insulin sensitivity | postmenopausal women | - | causes | #2 |
withdrawal of estrogen and progesterone | decrease | decreases in leptin secretion | postmenopausal women | - | causes | #3 |
withdrawal of estrogen and progesterone | neutral | changes in glucose and lipid metabolism | postmenopausal women | - | causes | #4 |
withdrawal of estrogen and progesterone | decrease | total reduction in energy expenditure | postmenopausal women | - | results in | #5 |
decrease in physical activity and consumption of a high fat diet | increase | obesity | postmenopausal women | - | significantly contribute to | #6 |
obesity | increase | localized inflammation | - | - | causes | #7 |
obesity | increase | increase in local estrogen production | - | - | causes | #8 |
obesity | neutral | changes in cellular metabolism | - | - | causes | #9 |
obesity | increase | insulin insensitivity | obese women | - | have a higher risk of | #10 |
obesity | increase | an increase in insulin and other growth factor secretion | obese women | - | have | #11 |
Obese postmenopausal women have an increased risk of breast cancer and are likely to have a worse prognosis than nonobese postmenopausal women. The cessation of ovarian function after menopause results in withdrawal of ovarian sex steroid hormones, estrogen, and progesterone. Accumulating evidence suggests that the withdrawal of estrogen and progesterone causes homeostasis imbalances, including decreases in insulin sensitivity and leptin secretion and changes in glucose and lipid metabolism, resulting in a total reduction in energy expenditure. Together with a decrease in physical activity and consumption of a high fat diet, these factors significantly contribute to obesity in postmenopausal women. Obesity may contribute to breast cancer development through several mechanisms. Obesity causes localized inflammation, an increase in local estrogen production, and changes in cellular metabolism. In addition, obese women have a higher risk of insulin insensitivity, and an increase in insulin and other growth factor secretion. In this review, we describe our current understanding of the molecular actions of estrogen and progesterone and their contributions to cellular metabolism, obesity, inflammation, and postmenopausal breast cancer. We also discuss how modifications of estrogen and progesterone actions might be used as a therapeutic approach for obesity and postmenopausal breast cancer.