Accelerated glycolysis in tumor microenvironment is associated with worse survival in triple-negative but not consistently with ER+/HER2- breast cancer

Am J Cancer Res. 2023 Jul 15;13(7):3041-3054. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Metabolic reprogramming to sustain immortality is a hallmark of cancer and glycolysis is an important way to attain this. Thus, we investigate the association of glycolysis and associated pathways in the survival of breast cancer. A total of 5,176 breast cancer patients from multiple independent cohorts were analyzed. We determined the glycolytic signaling score by the degree of enrichment by Gene Set Variant Analysis and the median was used to divide each cohort into high vs low score groups. Glycolysis high breast cancer significantly enriched the hallmark cell proliferation-related gene sets (E2F targets, G2M checkpoint, and MYC targets v1 and v2) and was associated with high MKI67 expression. In all cohorts, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) was associated with the highest glycolysis score. It was found that in TNBC, glycolysis high breast cancer was associated with worse survival but in ER-positive/HER2-negative breast cancer this was not observed consistently. The glycolysis high TNBC enriched multiple pro-cancerous gene sets and was infiltrated with a low level of B-cells and anti-cancerous immune cells, and significantly associated with a decreased level of cytolytic activity. It was also observed that the glycolysis was higher in the metastatic sites than in the primary breast cancer and the survival was not affected by the metastatic sites. In conclusion, accelerated glycolysis is associated with cancer cell proliferation and worse survival in TNBC.

Keywords: Breast cancer; GSVA; glycolysis signaling; prognostic biomarker; tumor microenvironment.