Transient increase in mitochondrial respiration in blood cells from breast cancer patients following chemo- and radiotherapy
Marie-Louise Abrahamsen, Ida Bager Christensen, Linda Laizāne, Haboon Ismail Ahmed, Kristian Buch-Larsen, Djordje Marina, Michael Andersson, Peter Schwarz, Flemming Dela, Linn Gillberg

TL;DR
This study found that mitochondrial respiration in blood cells of breast cancer patients increases temporarily after treatment but returns to normal within six months.
Contribution
The study reveals that the increase in mitochondrial respiration after chemo- and radiotherapy is transient, returning to baseline within six months.
Findings
Mitochondrial respiration in PBMCs increased significantly after treatment but returned to pre-treatment levels within six months.
Healthy controls had higher mitochondrial content compared to breast cancer patients before treatment.
The temporary rise in respiration may reflect immune system activation following therapy.
Abstract
Mitochondrial respiration in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) has previously been shown to increase after chemo- and radiotherapy in early-stage breast cancer (BC) patients, but the persistence of the increase remains unknown. This study assessed whether changes in mitochondrial respiration and content in PBMCs from postmenopausal BC patients persist up to 1 year after treatment. Thirty-four early-stage BC patients were studied before, shortly after, and six- and twelve-months post-treatment along with 20 healthy controls. Mitochondrial respiration was measured using high-resolution respirometry of intact and permeabilized PBMCs. Mitochondrial content was estimated by quantifying mitochondrial DNA relative to nuclear DNA via qPCR. The mitochondrial respiratory capacity of intact and permeabilized PBMCs from BC patients significantly increased after adjuvant chemo- and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism · Effects of Radiation Exposure · Mitochondrial Function and Pathology
