Literature DB >> 18250348

Oral contraceptives, postmenopausal hormones, and risk of asynchronous bilateral breast cancer: the WECARE Study Group.

Jane C Figueiredo1, Leslie Bernstein, Marinela Capanu, Kathleen E Malone, Charles F Lynch, Hoda Anton-Culver, Marilyn Stovall, Lisbeth Bertelsen, Robert W Haile, Jonine L Bernstein.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate whether oral contraceptive (OC) use and postmenopausal hormones (PMH) are associated with an increased risk of developing asynchronous bilateral breast cancer among women diagnosed with breast cancer younger than 55 years. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The WECARE (Women's Environment, Cancer, and Radiation Epidemiology) study is a population-based, multicenter, case-control study of 708 women with asynchronous bilateral breast cancer and 1,395 women with unilateral breast cancer. Risk factor information collected during a telephone interview focused on exposures before and after the first breast cancer diagnosis. Treatment and tumor characteristics were abstracted from medical records. Multivariable conditional logistic regression was used to estimate rate ratios (RR) and 95% CIs.
RESULTS: OC use before the first breast cancer diagnosis was not associated with risk of asynchronous bilateral breast cancer (RR = 0.88; 95% CI, 0.67 to 1.16). OC use after breast cancer diagnosis was also not significantly associated with risk (RR = 1.56; 95% CI, 0.71 to 3.45). Risk did not increase with longer duration of use or among women who had begun using OCs at a younger age. No evidence of an increased risk of asynchronous bilateral breast cancer was observed with PMH use before (RR = 1.21; 95% CI, 0.90 to 1.61) or after breast cancer diagnosis (RR = 1.10; 95% CI, 0.67 to 1.77). Neither duration nor type of PMH were associated with risk. Age at and time since first breast cancer diagnosis did not substantially affect these results.
CONCLUSION: This study provides no strong evidence that OC or PMH use increases the risk of a second cancer in the contralateral breast.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18250348     DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2007.14.3081

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Oncol        ISSN: 0732-183X            Impact factor:   44.544


  4 in total

1.  Inflammatory breast cancer: high risk of contralateral breast cancer compared to comparably staged non-inflammatory breast cancer.

Authors:  Catherine Schairer; Linda M Brown; Phuong L Mai
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2011-03-09       Impact factor: 4.872

2.  Oral contraceptives and postmenopausal hormones and risk of contralateral breast cancer among BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers and noncarriers: the WECARE Study.

Authors:  Jane C Figueiredo; Robert W Haile; Leslie Bernstein; Kathleen E Malone; Joan Largent; Bryan Langholz; Charles F Lynch; Lisbeth Bertelsen; Marinela Capanu; Patrick Concannon; Ake Borg; Anne-Lise Børresen-Dale; Anh Diep; Sharon Teraoka; Therese Torngren; Shanyan Xue; Jonine L Bernstein
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2009-07-14       Impact factor: 4.872

Review 3.  Bilateral breast cancers.

Authors:  Steven A Narod
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-02-04       Impact factor: 66.675

4.  Clonal evolution characteristics and reduced dimension prognostic model for non-metastatic metachronous bilateral breast cancer.

Authors:  Lingyu Li; Jiaxuan Li; Jiwei Jia; Hua He; Mingyang Li; Xu Yan; Qing Yu; Hanfei Guo; Hong Wang; Zheng Lv; Haishuang Sun; Guidong Liao; Jiuwei Cui
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 5.738

  4 in total

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