Interleukin-3 production by basal-like breast cancer cells is associated with poor prognosis.
Emma J ThompsonSamantha EscarbeDenis TvorogovGelareh FarshidPhilip A GregoryYeesim Khew-GoodallStephen MaddenWendy V IngmanGeoffrey J LindemanElgene LimAngel F LopezClaudine S BonderPublished in: Growth factors (Chur, Switzerland) (2024)
Breast cancer represents a collection of pathologies with different molecular subtypes, histopathology, risk factors, clinical behavior, and responses to treatment. "Basal-like" breast cancers predominantly lack the receptors for estrogen and progesterone (ER/PR), lack amplification of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) but account for 10-15% of all breast cancers, are largely insensitive to targeted treatment and represent a disproportionate number of metastatic cases and deaths. Analysis of interleukin (IL)-3 and the IL-3 receptor subunits ( IL-3RA + CSF2RB ) reveals elevated expression in predominantly the basal-like group. Further analysis suggests that IL-3 itself, but not the IL-3 receptor subunits, associates with poor patient outcome. Histology on patient-derived xenografts supports the notion that breast cancer cells are a significant source of IL-3 that may promote disease progression. Taken together, these observations suggest that IL-3 may be a useful marker in solid tumors, particularly triple negative breast cancer, and warrants further investigation into its contribution to disease pathogenesis.