
Hanash uncovers protein effects of HRT
Study links estrogen hormone replacement therapy with serum levels of proteins involved in several major body processes
May 4, 2009
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Photo by Gordon Todd Dr. Samir Hanash's in-depth proteomic analysis of the sera of 50 participants from the
Women’s Health Initiative hormone replacement therapy trial
provides explanations for the trial’s clinical results. |
An in-depth proteomic analysis of the sera of 50 participants from the
Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) hormone replacement therapy trial
provides some explanations for the trial’s clinical results. The study,
led by Dr. Samir Hanash and published in Biomed Central’s open access
journal
Genome Medicine, shows that estrogen upregulates proteins involved in several major body processes.
Hanash,
of the Public Health Sciences Division, worked with a team of
researchers to identify and quantify proteins from 2,576,869 mass
spectra, the largest serum protein data set obtained from a human
observational study or clinical trial to date.
“Remarkably, as
many as 10 percent of plasma proteins analyzed were found to be
affected by estrogen hormone replacement therapy in post-menopausal
women," Hanash said. "These changes indicate a substantial effect on
coagulation and metabolic proteins that may explain the increased risk
of venous thromboembolism and stroke, and the reduced risk of fracture,
found in the WHI trial.”
The authors used baseline and one-year
post-treatment sera samples from 50 women in the WHI trial, separated
into five experimental pools. The average age of the subjects was 61.4
years. There were no statistically significant differences in any
baseline characteristics between pools. Using samples gathered one year
after the initiation of therapy, they identified changes in serum
levels of proteins directly involved in processes as disparate as
osteogenesis, blood vessel morphogenesis, blood pressure regulation,
immunity, inflammation and coagulation.
This work demonstrates
the utility of comprehensive profiling of the serum proteome for
clinical investigations. “Our findings should encourage other
investigators to include quantitative proteomic analysis as part of
clinical trials of new therapies to better understand the effect of
therapy and to identify surrogate markers of response to treatment,”
Hanash said.
[Adapted from a news release from Genome Medicine
.]
Protein effects of hormone replacement therapy uncovered
May 4, 2009
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