Breast cancer and hormonal contraceptives: Further results

被引:0
|
作者
Calle, EE
Heath, CW
MiracleMcMahill, HL
Coates, RJ
Liff, JM
Franceschi, S
Talamini, R
Chantarakul, N
Koetsawang, S
Rachawat, D
Morabia, A
Schuman, I
Stewart, W
Szklo, M
Bain, C
Schofield, F
Siskind, V
Band, P
Coldman, AJ
Gallagher, RP
Hislop, TG
Yang, P
Duffy, SW
Kolonel, LM
Nomura, AMY
Oberle, MW
Ory, HW
Peterson, HB
Wilson, HG
Wingo, PA
Ebeling, K
Kunde, D
Nishan, P
Colditz, G
Martin, N
Pardthaisong, T
Silpisornkosol, S
Theetranont, C
Boosiri, B
Chutivongse, S
Jimakorn, P
Virutamasen, P
Wongsrichanalai, C
McMichael, AJ
Rohan, T
Ewertz, M
Paul, C
Skegg, DCG
Spears, GFS
Boyle, P
机构
[1] RADCLIFFE INFIRM, IMPERIAL CANC RES FUND, CANC EPIDEMIOL UNIT, OXFORD OX2 6HE, ENGLAND
[2] AMER CANC SOC, ATLANTA, GA 30329 USA
[3] EMORY UNIV, ATLANTA, GA 30322 USA
[4] AVIANO CANC CTR, PORDENONE, ITALY
[5] MAHIDOL UNIV, BANGKOK 10700, THAILAND
[6] JOHNS HOPKINS UNIV, BREAST TUMOR COLLABORAT STUDY, BALTIMORE, MD 21218 USA
[7] UNIV QUEENSLAND, BRISBANE, QLD, AUSTRALIA
[8] BRITISH COLUMBIA CANC AGCY, VANCOUVER, BC, CANADA
[9] MRC, BIOSTAT UNIT, CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
[10] UNIV HAWAII, CTR CANC RES, HONOLULU, HI 96822 USA
[11] CTR DIS CONTROL & PREVENT, ATLANTA, GA 30333 USA
[12] CENT INST CANC RES, BERLIN, GERMANY
[13] HARVARD UNIV, SCH MED,BRIGHAM & WOMENS HOSP,CHANNING LAB, NURSES HLTH STUDY RES GRP, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02138 USA
[14] CHIANG MAI UNIV, CHIANG MAI 50000, THAILAND
[15] CHULALONGKORN UNIV, BANGKOK 10330, THAILAND
[16] CSIRO, DIV HUMAN NUTR, ADELAIDE, SA 5000, AUSTRALIA
[17] DANISH CANC SOC, AARHUS, DENMARK
[18] UNIV OTAGO, DUNEDIN, NEW ZEALAND
[19] EUROPEAN INST ONCOL, MILAN, ITALY
[20] FRED HUTCHINSON CANC RES CTR, SEATTLE, WA 98104 USA
[21] INSERM, FRENCH MULTICTR BREAST STUDY, F-75654 PARIS 13, FRANCE
[22] HOSP GEN MEXICO SA, MEXICO CITY, DF, MEXICO
[23] INST GUSTAVE ROUSSY, INSERM, F-94805 VILLEJUIF, FRANCE
[24] INST CANC RES, SUTTON, SURREY, ENGLAND
[25] ISRAEL CHAIM SHEBA MED CTR, TEL HASHOMER, ISRAEL
[26] KAISER PERMANENTE, OAKLAND, CA USA
[27] IMPERIAL CANC RES FUND, GENET EPIDEMIOL LAB, LEEDS, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
[28] INST ONCOL, LJUBLJANA, SLOVENIA
[29] LOMA LINDA UNIV, LOMA LINDA, CA 92350 USA
[30] IMPERIAL CANC RES FUND, LONDON WC2A 3PX, ENGLAND
[31] LONG ISL BREAST CANC STUDY, LONG ISL CITY, NY USA
[32] UNIV LUND HOSP, S-22185 LUND, SWEDEN
[33] UNIV LIMBURG, NL-6200 MD MAASTRICHT, NETHERLANDS
[34] UNIV PHILIPPINES, MANILA, PHILIPPINES
[35] IST RIC FARMACOL MARIO NEGRI, MILAN, ITALY
[36] UNIV MILAN, IST STAT MED & BIOMETRIA, I-20122 MILAN, ITALY
[37] IST NAZL TUMORI, DIV STAT MED & BIOMETRA, I-20133 MILAN, ITALY
[38] CTR CANC, MONTPELLIER, FRANCE
[39] INSERM, MONTPELLIER, FRANCE
[40] NAIROBI CTR RES REPROD, NAIROBI, KENYA
[41] NCI, BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA
[42] NICHHD, BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA
[43] NATL UNIV SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE 117548, SINGAPORE
[44] NETHERLANDS CANC INST, AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
[45] NEW JERSEY STATE DEPT HLTH, TRENTON, NJ 08625 USA
[46] COLUMBIA UNIV, SCH PUBL HLTH, NEW YORK, NY USA
[47] ONTARIO CANC TREATMENT & RES FDN, TORONTO, ON, CANADA
[48] DEPT PUBL HLTH & PRIMARY CARE, OXFORD, ENGLAND
[49] IMPERIAL CANC RES FUND, MRC, BHF CLIN TRIAL SERV UNIT, OXFORD, ENGLAND
[50] IMPERIAL CANC RES FUND, MRC, EPIDEMIOL STUDIES UNIT, OXFORD, ENGLAND
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R71 [妇产科学];
学科分类号
100211 ;
摘要
The Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer has brought together and reanalysed the worldwide epidemiological evidence on breast cancer risk and use oi hormonal contraceptives. Original data from 54 studies, representing about 90% of the information available on the topic, were collected, checked and analysed centrally. The 54 studies were performed in 26 countries and include a total of 53,297 women with breast cancer and 100,239 women without breast cancer. The studies were varied in their design, setting and timing. Most information came from case-control studies with controls chosen from the general population; most women resided in Europe or North America and most cancers were diagnosed during the 1980s. Overall 41% of the women with breast cancer and 40% of the women without breast cancer had used oral contraceptives at some time: the median age at first use was 26 years, the median duration of use was 3 years, the median year of first use was 1968, the median time since first use was 16 years, and the median time since last use was 9 years. The main findings, summarised elsewhere,I are that there is a small increase in the risk of having breast cancer diagnosed in current users of combined oral contraceptives and in women who had stopped use in the past 10 years but that there is no evidence of an increase in the risk more than 10 years after stopping use. In addition, the cancers diagnosed in women who had used oral contraceptives tended to be less advanced clinically than the cancers diagnosed in women who had not used them. Despite the large number of possibilities investigated, few factors appeared to modify the main findings either in recent or in past users. For recent users who began use before age 20 the relative risks are higher than for recent users who began at older ages. For women whose use of oral contraceptives ceased more than 10 years before there was some suggestion of a reduction in breast cancer risk in certain subgroups, with a deficit of tumors that had spread beyond the breast, especially among women who had used preparations containing the highest doses of oestrogen and progestogen. These findings are unexpected and need to be confirmed. Although these data represent most of the epidemiologi cal evidence on the topic to date, there is still insufficient information to comment reliably about the effects of specific types of oestrogen or of progestogen. What evidence there is suggests, however, no major differences in the effects for specific types of oestrogen or of progestogen and that the pattern of risk associated with use of hormonal contraceptives containing progestogens alone may be similar to that observed for preparations containing both oestrogens and progestogens. On the basis of these results, there is little difference between women who have and have not used combined oral contraceptives in terms of the estimated cumulative number of breast cancers diagnosed during the period from starting use up to 20 rears after stopping. The cancers diagnosed in women who have used oral contraceptives are, however, less advanced clinically than the cancers diag nosed in never users. Further research is needed to establish whether the associations described here are due to earlier diagnosis of breast cancer in women who have used oral contraceptives, to the biological effects of the hormonal contraceptives or to a combination of both. Little information is as yet available about the effects on breast cancer risk of oral contraceptive use that ceased more than 20 years before and as such data accumulate it will be necessary to reexamine the worldwide evidence.
引用
收藏
页码:S1 / S106
页数:106
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] HORMONAL RECEPTORS AND CANCER OF THE BREAST - FURTHER RESULTS
    ABECASSIS, J
    EBER, M
    PUSEL, J
    RODIER, D
    JAECK, D
    JANSER, JC
    JACQMIN, D
    HAEHNEL, P
    APROSIO, N
    METHLIN, G
    [J]. JOURNAL DE MEDECINE DE STRASBOURG, 1980, 11 (07): : 394 - 395
  • [2] HORMONAL CONTRACEPTIVES AND BREAST-CANCER
    SCHINDLER, AE
    [J]. DEUTSCHE MEDIZINISCHE WOCHENSCHRIFT, 1989, 114 (05) : 163 - 165
  • [3] Breast cancer and combined oral contraceptives: Results from the Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer
    Beral, V
    Reeves, G
    [J]. NEW INSIGHTS IN GYNECOLOGY & OBSTETRICS: RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 1998, : 219 - 221
  • [4] Hormonal contraceptives and breast cancer: Clinical data
    Zolfaroli, Irene
    Tarin, Juan J.
    Cano, Antonio
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY, 2018, 230 : 212 - 216
  • [5] The Impact of Hormonal Contraceptives on Breast Cancer Pathology
    Dorchak, Jesse A.
    Maria, Sifat
    Guarinoni, Joseph L.
    Duensing, Anette
    Somiari, Stella
    Cavanaugh, Jane
    Deyarmin, Brenda
    Hu, Hai
    Iida, Joji
    Shriver, Craig D.
    Witt-Enderby, Paula A.
    [J]. HORMONES & CANCER, 2018, 9 (04): : 240 - 253
  • [6] The Impact of Hormonal Contraceptives on Breast Cancer Pathology
    Jesse A. Dorchak
    Sifat Maria
    Joseph L. Guarinoni
    Anette Duensing
    Stella Somiari
    Jane Cavanaugh
    Brenda Deyarmin
    Hai Hu
    Joji Iida
    Craig D. Shriver
    Paula A. Witt-Enderby
    [J]. Hormones and Cancer, 2018, 9 : 240 - 253
  • [7] Hormonal Contraceptives and Breast Cancer Risk - Overview of the Literature
    Radisic, Bjelic, V
    Petru, E.
    [J]. GEBURTSHILFE UND FRAUENHEILKUNDE, 2010, 70 (05) : 424 - 424
  • [8] HORMONAL CONTRACEPTIVES AND FIBROADENOMAS OF BREAST
    OBERMAN, HA
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1971, 284 (17): : 984 - &
  • [9] Reproductive factors and hormonal contraceptives in relation with breast cancer histopathology
    Malek, A. B.
    Gusbi, E.
    Grain, M.
    Eddeb, M.
    Erzeghi, M.
    Ahmed, H.
    [J]. ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2021, 32 : S91 - S91
  • [10] Do modern hormonal Contraceptives increase the Breast Cancer Risk?
    Bauer-Kemeny, Claudia
    [J]. DEUTSCHE MEDIZINISCHE WOCHENSCHRIFT, 2018, 143 (08)