| Literature DB >> 36176466 |
Xiaojing Liu1, Jing Yue1, Ruqiya Pervaiz2, Hanwang Zhang1, Lan Wang1.
Abstract
Women with hereditary breast cancer factors are more likely to be infertile and tend to receive fertility treatments. The safety of fertility treatments that contain hormone-related medications for ovarian stimulation has gained wide attention; however, evidence of the safety of fertility treatments is limited. This study aims to assess the association between fertility treatments and the incidence rate of breast cancer in women with a family history of breast cancer or BRCA mutations. A literature search was conducted in PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Embase. Studies concerning the effect of fertility treatments on breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women were included. The fixed and random effects models were used to estimate the summary effects. Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies - of Interventions instrument was used to assess the risk of bias in the included studies. A total of 5,282 studies were screened. Five cohort studies and three case-control studies were included. Breast cancer risk was not significantly increased by fertility treatments in general genetically susceptible women [pooled odds ratio (OR) 1.18, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.96-1.45], women with a family history of breast cancer (pooled OR 1.35, 95% CI 0.97-1.89), or women with BRCA mutations (pooled OR 1.02, 95% CI 0.74-1.4). In subgroup analyses, there was no significant increase in breast cancer risk whether in BRCA1 mutation carriers (pooled OR 1.18, 95% CI 0.81-1.72), BRCA2 mutation carriers (pooled OR 0.54, 95% CI 0.09-3.34), or in the women treated with in vitro fertilization (pooled OR 0.75, 95% CI 0.51-1.1), clomiphene citrate (pooled OR 1.07, 95% CI 0.78-1.45) or gonadotropins (pooled OR 1.32, 95% CI 0.8-2.18). This is the first meta-analysis concerning the impact of fertility treatments on breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women. Despite the finding that fertility treatment did not significantly increase breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women, large prospective cohorts with more detailed information are required. Further investigations are needed to explore subtypes of breast cancer, genetic background of hormone-related breast cancer, and the association between BRCA mutations and the incidence of hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. Registration number: PROSPERO(CRD42021281336).Entities:
Keywords: brca mutation; breast cancer; fertility treatment; infertility; ovarian stimulation
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36176466 PMCID: PMC9513064 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2022.986477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 6.055
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) flow diagram of the study selection process.
Characteristics of included studies in the meta-analysis of the impact of fertility treatments on breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women.
| Study publication | Country | Study period | Study types | Types of hereditary factors | Cohort size (genetically susceptible women) | Total number of exposed women | Number of incidence cases | Number of exposed cases | Fertility treatments strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perri et al. (2021) | Israel | 1995-2020 | Historical prospect cohort study | BRCA1/2 mutations | 1,824 | 332 | 687 | 89 | CC, gonadotropins, IVF and combination of these treatments |
| Derks-Smeets et al. (2018) | The Netherlands | 2010-2013 | Retrospective cohort study | BRCA1/2 mutations | 2,514 | 76 | 938 | 15 | Ovarian stimulation for IVF |
| Kotsopoulos et al. (2008) | Canada | 1994-2007 | Case-control study | BRCA1/2 mutations | 2,760 | 137 | 1,380 | 70 | IVF or fertility medication including CC, gonadotropins or other drugs |
| Braga et al. (1996) | Italy | 1991-1994 | Case-control study | Family history of breast cancer | 434 | 12 | 299 | 2 | Infertility treatments |
| Gauthier et al. (2004) | France | 1990-2000 | Prospective cohort study | Family history of breast cancer | 10,221 | 526 | 455 | 32 | Treated by fertility drugs including CC, menotrophin,and chorionic gonadotrophin |
| Pervaiz et al. (2018) | North Cyprus | 2016-2017 | Case-control study | Family history of breast cancer | 358 | 77 | 228 | 59 | Fertility drugs |
| Vassard et al. (2021) | Denmark | 1994-2016 | Retrospective cohort study | Family history of breast cancer | 142,282 | N.R. | 289 | 36 | ART |
| Brinton et al. (2014) | The USA | 1965-2010 | Retrospective cohort study | Family history of breast cancer | 619 | N.R. | 76 | 47 | CC, gonadotropins and combination of these treatments |
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| Perri et al. (2021) | HR (breast cancer) | General population(mutation type, parental origin of the mutation, age at menarche, hormone replacement therapy, incidence of cancer diagnosis) | Risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and/or prophylactic mastectomy, BRCA mutation type, parity, age at menarche, age at first pregnancy, OC use, paternal mutation origin | N.R. | Medical records | Israel National Cancer Registry | Moderate | ||
| Derks-Smeets et al. (2018) | HR (breast cancer) | General population or subfertile population (other invasive cancer diagnosis, bilateral prophylactic mastectomy, subfertility, birth cohort, other fertility treatments including clomid and/or intrauterine insemination, use of OC, parity, age at first birth) | Subfertility, birth year | N.R. | Medical record from the Dutch HEBON study (Hereditary Breast and Ovarian cancer study, the Netherlands) and the national PGD registry | Self-reported, the Dutch national Pathology Database (PALGA) and the Netherlands Cancer Registry (NCR) | Moderate | ||
| Kotsopoulos et al. (2008) | OR (breast cancer) | General population(mutation in the same gene, year of birth, country of residence and parity, diagnosis with other cancers, bilateral mactectomy) | Parity, age at mernache and ethnicity | N.R. | Medical records from 47 participating medical centres in nine countries | Medical records from 47 participating medical centres in nine countries | Moderate | ||
| Braga et al. (1996) | OR (breast cancer) | General population (age at inclusion, area of residence) | Menopausal status, parity, education, age, centre | N.R. | Medical records from the major teaching and general hospitals of study areas | Medical records from the major teaching and general hospitals of study areas | Serious | ||
| Gauthier et al. (2004) | RR (breast cancer) | General population (N.R.) | Parity and age at first full-term pregnancy, age at mernache, personal history of benign breast disease, number of first-degree relatives with a history of breast cancer, BMI at inclusion, active smoking at inclusion, numbers of years school | 9.7 | Medical records from the French E3N cohort(Etude Epidémiologique auprès de femmes de la Mutuelle Générale de l’Education Nationale) | Medical records from the French E3N cohort | Serious | ||
| Pervaiz et al. (2018) | OR (breast cancer) | General population (age) | N.R. | N.R. | Medical records from Near East Hospital and Dr. Burhan Nalbantoglu State Hospital | Medical records from Near East Hospital and Dr. Burhan Nalbantoglu State Hospital | Serious | ||
| Vassard et al. (2021) | HR (breast cancer) | General population (age) | Age(time-varying, stratified in 2-year intervals), education level, partnership status, year, nulliparity (time-varing) | 9.69 | IVF register | Danish Cancer registry | Serious | ||
| Brinton et al.(2014) | HR (breast cancer) | General population (exclusion of diagnosis within first year of fertility treatment) | Study site, calendar year of first infertility evaluation, gravidity at first clinic visit | 30 | Five reproductive enocrinology practices | Cancer registries in the 14 states | Serious |
NR, not reported; HR, hazard ratio; RR, relative risk; OR, odds ratio; CC, clomiphene citrate; IVF, in-vitro fertilization; ART, assisted reproductive technology; OC, oral contraceptive; HMG, human menopausal gonadotropin; PGD, preimplantation genetic diagnosis.
Figure 2Forest plots demonstrating the comparison of breast cancer risk in women with hereditary factors treated with fertility treatments or not. OR, odds ratio.
Figure 3Forest plots demonstrating the comparison of breast cancer risk in women with BRCA1 mutations or BRCA2 mutations who were treated by fertility treatments or not. (A), comparison of breast cancer risk in women with BRCA1 mutations. (B), comparison of breast cancer risk in women with BRCA2 mutations. OR, odds ratio.
Figure 4Forest plots demonstrating the comparison of breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women who were treated with IVF, CC, or gonadotropins. (A), comparison of breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women treated by IVF or not. (B), comparison of breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women treated by CC or not. (C), comparison of breast cancer risk in genetically susceptible women treated with gonadotropins or not. OR, odds ratio; CC, clomiphene citrate; in vitro fertilization, IVF.