Literature DB >> 22622809

Adolescent intakes of vitamin D and calcium and incidence of proliferative benign breast disease.

Xuefen Su1, Graham A Colditz, Laura C Collins, Heather J Baer, Laura A Sampson, Walter C Willett, Catherine S Berkey, Stuart J Schnitt, James L Connolly, Bernard A Rosner, Rulla M Tamimi.   

Abstract

Vitamin D and calcium have been shown to have protective effects against breast cancer development in animal studies. Vitamin D and calcium play important anticarcinogenic roles in animal studies. Exposures between menarche and first birth may be important in breast development and future breast cancer risk. However, the relations between adolescent vitamin D and calcium intake and the risk of proliferative benign breast disease (BBD), a marker of increased breast cancer risk, have not yet been evaluated. We examined these associations in the Nurses' Health Study II. Among the 29,480 women who completed an adolescent diet questionnaire in 1998, 682 proliferative BBD cases were identified and confirmed by centralized pathology review between 1991 and 2001. Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95 % confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated by Cox proportional hazards regression and adjusted for potential confounders. A suggestive inverse association was observed between adolescent total vitamin D intake and proliferative BBD. Women in the highest quintile of vitamin D intake during adolescence had a 21 % lower risk (multivariate HR (95 % CI): 0.79 (0.61, 1.01), p-trend = 0.07) of proliferative BBD than women in the lowest quintile. Results were essentially the same when the analysis was restricted to prospective cases (n = 142) diagnosed after return of the adolescent diet questionnaire and independent of adult vitamin D intake. Adolescent total milk intake was positively associated with proliferative BBD (≥3 servings/day vs. <1 serving/day HR (95 % CI): 1.41 (0.91, 2.17), p-trend = 0.03), after additional adjustment for total vitamin D. Calcium intake during adolescence was not associated with proliferative BBD (p-trend = 0.91). Vitamin D intake during adolescence may be important in the earlier stage of breast carcinogenesis. These findings, if corroborated, may suggest new pathways and strategies for breast cancer prevention.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22622809      PMCID: PMC3662049          DOI: 10.1007/s10549-012-2091-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat        ISSN: 0167-6806            Impact factor:   4.872


  29 in total

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  8 in total

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Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2019-06-20       Impact factor: 4.872

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4.  Intakes of fat and micronutrients between ages 13 and 18 years and the incidence of proliferative benign breast disease.

Authors:  Xuefen Su; Caroline E Boeke; Laura C Collins; Heather J Baer; Walter C Willett; Stuart J Schnitt; James L Connolly; Bernard Rosner; Graham A Colditz; Rulla M Tamimi
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  8 in total

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