Treatment with insulin (analogues) and breast cancer risk in diabetics; a systematic review and meta-analysis of in vitro, animal and human evidence

Publication date

2015

Authors

Bronsveld, H.K.ISNI 0000000517904142
ter Braak, Bas
Karlstad, Øystein
Vestergaard, Peter
Starup-Linde, Jakob
Bazelier, M.T.ISNI 0000000396732689
de Bruin, M.L.ORCID 0000-0001-9197-7068ISNI 0000000397182332
De Boer, AnthoniusISNI 0000000389596105
Siezen, Christine L E
van de Water, Bob

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Several studies have suggested that anti-diabetic insulin analogue treatment might increase cancer risk. The aim of this study was to review the postulated association between insulin and insulin analogue treatment and breast cancer development, and plausible mechanisms. METHOD: A systematic literature search was performed on breast cell-line, animal and human studies using the key words 'insulin analogue' and 'breast neoplasia' in MEDLINE at PubMed, EMBASE, and ISI Web of Science databases. A quantitative and qualitative review was performed on the epidemiological data; due to a limited number of reported estimates, a meta-analysis was performed for glargine only. A comprehensive overview was composed for in vitro and animal studies. Protein and gene expression was analysed for the cell lines most frequently used in the included in vitro studies. RESULTS: In total 16 in vitro, 5 animal, 2 in vivo human and 29 epidemiological papers were included. Insulin AspB10 showed mitogenic properties in vitro and in animal studies. Glargine was the only clinically available insulin analogue for which an increased proliferative potential was found in breast cancer cell lines. However, the pooled analysis of 13 epidemiological studies did not show evidence for an association between insulin glargine treatment and an increased breast cancer risk (HR 1.04; 95 % CI 0.91-1.17; p=0.49) versus no glargine in patients with diabetes mellitus. It has to be taken into account that the number of animal studies was limited, and epidemiological studies were underpowered and suffered from methodological limitations. CONCLUSION: There is no compelling evidence that any clinically available insulin analogue (Aspart, Determir, Glargine, Glulisine or Lispro), nor human insulin increases breast cancer risk. Overall, the data suggests that insulin treatment is not involved in breast tumour initiation, but might induce breast tumour progression by up regulating mitogenic signalling pathways.

Keywords

SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Bronsveld, H K, ter Braak, B, Karlstad, Ø, Vestergaard, P, Starup-Linde, J, Bazelier, M T, De Bruin, M L, de Boer, A, Siezen, C L E, van de Water, B, van der Laan, J W & Schmidt, M K 2015, 'Treatment with insulin (analogues) and breast cancer risk in diabetics; a systematic review and meta-analysis of in vitro, animal and human evidence', Breast Cancer Research, vol. 17, no. 1, 100. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-015-0611-2