National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, MD 20852, USA.
Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Indiana University, School of Public Health, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA.
Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2021 Oct;246(19):2098-2110. doi: 10.1177/15353702211019697. Epub 2021 Jun 3.
Lung cancer represents the world's leading cause of cancer deaths. Sex differences in the incidence and mortality rates for various types of lung cancers have been identified, but the biological and endocrine mechanisms implicated in these disparities have not yet been determined. While some cancers such as lung adenocarcinoma are more commonly found among women than men, others like squamous cell carcinoma display the opposite pattern or show no sex differences. Associations of tobacco product use rates, susceptibility to carcinogens, occupational exposures, and indoor and outdoor air pollution have also been linked to differential rates of lung cancer occurrence and mortality between sexes. While roles for sex hormones in other types of cancers affecting women or men have been identified and described, little is known about the influence of sex hormones in lung cancer. One potential mechanism identified to date is the synergism between estrogen and some tobacco compounds, and oncogene mutations, in inducing the expression of metabolic enzymes, leading to enhanced formation of reactive oxygen species and DNA adducts, and subsequent lung carcinogenesis. In this review, we present the literature available regarding sex differences in cancer rates, associations of male and female sex hormones with lung cancer, the influence of exogenous hormone therapy in women, and potential mechanisms mediated by male and female sex hormone receptors in lung carcinogenesis. The influence of biological sex on lung disease has recently been established, thus new research incorporating this variable will shed light on the mechanisms behind the observed disparities in lung cancer rates, and potentially lead to the development of new therapeutics to treat this devastating disease.
肺癌是全球癌症死亡的主要原因。不同类型肺癌的发病率和死亡率存在性别差异,但这些差异所涉及的生物学和内分泌机制尚未确定。虽然某些癌症,如肺腺癌,在女性中的发病率高于男性,但其他类型的癌症,如鳞状细胞癌,则表现出相反的模式或没有性别差异。烟草制品使用率、致癌物质易感性、职业暴露以及室内外空气污染等因素与不同性别间肺癌发生率和死亡率的差异也有关联。虽然已经确定并描述了性激素在影响女性或男性的其他类型癌症中的作用,但对于性激素在肺癌中的影响知之甚少。迄今为止,已经确定了一个潜在的机制,即雌激素和某些烟草化合物与致癌基因突变更为协同作用,诱导代谢酶的表达,导致活性氧和 DNA 加合物的形成增强,随后引发肺癌发生。在这篇综述中,我们介绍了关于癌症发病率的性别差异、男性和女性性激素与肺癌的关联、女性外源性激素治疗的影响以及男性和女性性激素受体在肺癌发生中的潜在机制方面的现有文献。生物性别对肺部疾病的影响最近已经得到证实,因此,新的研究纳入这一变量将有助于揭示观察到的肺癌发病率差异背后的机制,并有可能为治疗这种毁灭性疾病开发新的疗法。