Submitted:
09 December 2025
Posted:
24 December 2025
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Abstract
Hydroxyprogesterone (HP) is a synthetic progestogen widely used in obstetric care, and its potential influence on breast cancer biology has become an emerging area of interest. Despite its clinical use, the molecular mechanisms by which HP affects tumor tissue remain insufficiently explored. In this study, transcriptomic profiling was performed to investigate gene expression changes associated with HP in operable breast cancer. Pre-operative 17-OHPC exposure was associated, in normal adjacent tissue (NAT), with activation of steroid-hormone and lipid/xenobiotic-metabolism programs and crosstalk to PI3K–Akt and NF-κB. In NAT, these pathways showed the largest absolute log2 fold-change (|log2FC|); significance is reported as FDR throughout (e.g., FKBP5↑ with HP). In tumor tissue, the dominant signal reflected tight-junction/apical-junction and ECM-receptor remodeling (e.g., CLDN4↑). We prioritized FKBP5 (HP pharmacodynamics) and CLDN4 (tumor baseline) as the main candidates; TSPO and SGK1 are reported as exploratory. These findings provide mechanistic insight into HP’s molecular effects in breast cancer and suggest potential applications in biomarker perioperative management.