| Literature DB >> 26863311 |
Oliver Preyer1, Dorthe Johansen2, Jessica Holly3, Tanja Stocks4, Alfonso Pompella5, Gabriele Nagel1,6, Hans Concin1, Hanno Ulmer7, Nicole Concin3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Elevated γ-Glutamyltransferase serum levels are associated with increased risk of overall cancer incidence and several site-specific malignancies. In the present prospective study we report on the associations of serum γ-Glutamyltransferase with the risk of breast cancer in a pooled population-based cohort considering established life style risk factors.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26863311 PMCID: PMC4749274 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0149122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of the Vorarlberg and the Malmoe cohort and of the pooled study population.
| Study population | Vorarlberg | Malmoe | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | Mean (± SD); Median | N (%) | Mean (± SD); Median | N (%) | Mean (± SD); Median | |
| 97,268 | 9,790 | 107,058 | ||||
| 97,268 | 15.4 (± 6.4); 16.7 | 9,790 | 22.5 (±7.8); 24.3 | 107,058 | 16.1 (±6.8); 17.5 | |
| 1,497,730 | 219,789 | 1,717,519 | ||||
| 97,268 | 24 (±33); 18 | 9,790 | 24 (±30); 17 | 107,058 | 24 (±33); 17 | |
| 97,268 | 41 (±16); 38 | 9,790 | 49 (±7); 52 | 107,058 | 42 (±15); 40 | |
| 97,242 | 24.3 (±4.7); 23.3 | 9,787 | 24.4 (±4.3); 23.6 | 107,029 | 24.3 (±4.6); 23.3 | |
| Never | 75,654 (77.8) | 4,095 (44.4) | 79,749 (74.9) | |||
| Former | 3,192 (3.3) | 1,941 (21) | 5,133 (4.8) | |||
| Current | 18,422 (18.9) | 3,191 (34.6) | 21,613 (20.3) | |||
| n.a. | 2198 (22.5) | 2198 (22.5) | ||||
| n.a. | 7555 (77.5) | 7555 (77.5) | ||||
| 0 | n.a. | 1152 (11.8) | 1152 (11.8) | |||
| 1 | n.a. | 6023 (61.8) | 6023 (61.8) | |||
| No | n.a. | 8841 (90.7) | 8841 (90.7) | |||
| Yes | n.a. | 908 (9.3) | 908 (9.3) | |||
| No | n.a. | 7,301 (75.8) | 7,301 (75.8) | |||
| Yes | n.a. | 2,325 (24.2) | 2,325 (24.2) | |||
| Unemployed / retired | 30,465 (33.6) | 4,255 (59.3) | 34,720 (35.5) | |||
| Employed | 60,189 (66.4) | 2,917 (40.7) | 63,106 (64.5) | |||
| Manual | 33,458 (40.2) | 4.067 (46.9) | 37,525 (40.8) | |||
| Non-manual | 49,800 (59.8) | 4,603 (53.1) | 54,403 (59.2) | |||
| Single | 16,299 (17.4) | 889 (9.1) | 17,188 (16.6) | |||
| Married | 59,787 (63.8) | 6,699 (68.6) | 66,486 (64.2) | |||
| Divorced | 7,450 (7.9) | 1,689 (17.3) | 9,139 (8.8) | |||
| Widowed | 10,205 (10.9) | 483 (4.9) | 10,688 (10.3) | |||
| Breast cancer | 2,436 (2.5) | 761 (7.8) | 3,197 (3) | |||
| Censored other cancer | 6,042 (6.2) | 1,820 (18.6) | 7,862 (7.3) | |||
| Censored death | 7,273 (7.5) | 914 (9.3) | 8,187 (7.6) | |||
| Censored loss to FU | 0 (0) | 135 (1.4) | 135 (1.4) | |||
| Censored end of study | 81,517 (83.8) | 6,160 (62.9) | 87,677 (81.9) | |||
SD standard deviation, y years, kg kilograms, m2 square meters, °C degrees Celsius, FU follow-up, L Litres, n.a. not available
* Numbers do not add to total N because of missing values
** Alcohol consumption based on question”Do you mainly drink alcohol at weekends or public holidays?”
Crude (univariate model) and adjusted risk (multivariate model I) estimates of breast cancer incidence in the pooled Vorarlberg and Malmoe cohort.
| GGT levels | Breast cancer incidence, N (%) | Univariate model, HR (95% CI) | Multivariate model I, HR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quartile 1 | 649 (2.2%) | Reference | Reference |
| Quartile 2 | 601 (2.5%) | 1.10 (0.99 to 1.23) | 1.02 (0.91 to 1.14) |
| Quartile 3 | 890 (3%) | 1.39 (1.25 to 1.54) | 1.11 (1 to 1.24) |
| Quartile 4 | 921 (3.8%) | 1.76 (1.59 to 1.94) | 1.21 (1.09 to 1.35) |
| p for trend (GGT) | < 0.001 | 0.005 |
CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio, GGT γ-Glutamyltransferase, U/L units/Litre
Univariate model stratified by cohort. Multivariate model I adjusted for age, body mass index and smoking status stratified by cohort.
*Quartile size: Quartile 1 27.8%, Quartile 2 22.3%, Quartile 3 27.6%, Quartile 4 22.3%
Adjusted risk estimates of breast cancer incidence in the Malmoe cohort (multivariate model II) adjusted additionally for alcohol consumption (multivariate model III).
| GGT levels | Breast cancer incidence, N (%) | Multivariate model II, HR (95% CI) | Multivariate model III, HR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quartile 1 | 649 (2.2%) | Reference | Reference |
| Quartile 2 | 601 (2.5%) | 1.11 (0.90 to 1.36) | 1.01 (0.89 to 1.35) |
| Quartile 3 | 890 (3.0%) | 1.09 (0.88 to 1.36) | 1.08 (0.87 to 1.35) |
| Quartile 4 | 921 (3.8%) | 1.39 (1.13 to 1.71) | 1.37 (1.11 to 1.69) |
| No | 523 (6.7%) | Reference | |
| Yes | 205 (8.2%) | 1.19 (1.01 to 1.41) | |
| p for trend (GGT) | 0.004 | 0.006 | |
CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio, GGT γ-Glutamyltransferase, U/L units/Litre. Model II adjusted for age, body mass index, smoking status, physical activity, parity, and oral contraceptive-use; Malmoe cohort only. Model III adjusted for age, body mass index, smoking status, physical activity, parity, oral contraceptive-use and alcohol consumption; Malmoe cohort only
*Quartile size: Quartile 1 29.1%, Quartile 2 25.3%, Quartile 3 22.3%, Quartile 4 23.3%
** Questionnaire issue: “Do you mainly drink alcohol at weekends or public holidays?”
Multiple linear regression of GGT-levels in logarithmic units with established risk factors for breast cancer and other anamnestic parameters in the Malmoe cohort for complete cases (n = 6441).
| Risk factor / Descriptive statistics | N (%), Mean (± SD) | Standardized Beta | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age in completed years | 51.7 (±4.5) | 0.222 | <0.001 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 24.8 (±4.3) | 0.086 | <0.001 |
| 0.091 | <0.001 | ||
| No | 4,430 (66.7%) | ||
| Yes | 2,211 (33.3%) | ||
| -0.038 | 0.001 | ||
| No | 1,700 (25.6%) | ||
| Yes | 4,941 (74.4%) | ||
| -0.032 | 0.008 | ||
| Nulliparous | 1,076 (16.2%) | ||
| Other | 5,565 (83.8%) | ||
| 0.075 | <0.001 | ||
| No | 6,326 (95.3%) | ||
| Yes | 315 (4.7%) | ||
| 0.067 | <0.001 | ||
| No | 5,032 (75.8%) | ||
| Yes | 1,609 (24.2%) | ||
| 0.028 | 0.02 | ||
| No | 5,708 (86%) | ||
| Yes | 933 (14%) |
Categorical variables were included as 0/1 coded indicator variables into the regression model.
* Questionnaire issue: “Do you smoke or have you been smoking?”
** Questionnaire issue: “Do you mainly drink alcohol at weekends or public holidays?”
*** Questionnaire issue: “Are you aerobic physical active at least for 150 minutes (moderate-intensive) or at least for 75 minutes (vigorous-intensive) or an equivalent combination of moderate- to vigorous-intensive active per week?”