Literature DB >> 8050817

Ethanol and breast cancer: an association that may be both confounded and causal.

K Katsouyanni1, A Trichopoulou, S Stuver, S Vassilaros, Y Papadiamantis, N Bournas, N Skarpou, N Mueller, D Trichopoulos.   

Abstract

We have examined the association of alcohol intake during various life periods, by beverage category, with breast cancer risk in Greece. A hospital-based case-control study was performed in Athens, involving 820 women with breast cancer as well as 795 orthopedic patients and 753 healthy visitor controls. Relative risk patterns were very similar with either control series, which were therefore combined to increase precision of the estimates. Drinkers of beer were at significantly elevated risk for breast cancer [odds ratio (OR), 1.34 (95% confidence interval, 1.05-1.71)]. However, drinkers of other alcoholic beverages were not at increased risk. Among beer drinkers there was no dose-response, and drinkers of both beer and other beverages had a lower OR compared to drinkers of beer only. By contrast, drinkers of 3 or more glasses of alcohol per day, mostly of spirits, were at elevated risk for breast cancer [OR for 3 - < 4 glasses per day, 3.01 (1.14-7.95); OR for 4 or more glasses per day, 3.79 (1.05-13.71)]. Reported frequency of consumption was a stronger predictor of breast cancer risk than either duration-weighted total consumption or consumption before the age of 30 years. There were no coherent patterns for interaction with menopausal status, obesity or use of menopausal estrogens. The association of very low levels of alcohol intake with breast cancer risk may be due to confounding, whereas drinking 3 or more glasses of alcoholic beverages daily appears to genuinely increase breast cancer risk, perhaps by acting as a late-stage growth enhancing factor. However, the data also are compatible with a linear relationship that has no threshold.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8050817     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.2910580308

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  3 in total

1.  Influence of ethanol on in vitro growth of human mammary carcinoma cell line MCF-7.

Authors:  A Przylipiak; T Rabe; J Hafner; M Przylipiak; R Runnebaum
Journal:  Arch Gynecol Obstet       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 2.344

2.  Alcohol, tobacco and breast cancer--collaborative reanalysis of individual data from 53 epidemiological studies, including 58,515 women with breast cancer and 95,067 women without the disease.

Authors:  N Hamajima; K Hirose; K Tajima; T Rohan; E E Calle; C W Heath; R J Coates; J M Liff; R Talamini; N Chantarakul; S Koetsawang; D Rachawat; A Morabia; L Schuman; W Stewart; M Szklo; C Bain; F Schofield; V Siskind; P Band; A J Coldman; R P Gallagher; T G Hislop; P Yang; L M Kolonel; A M Y Nomura; J Hu; K C Johnson; Y Mao; S De Sanjosé; N Lee; P Marchbanks; H W Ory; H B Peterson; H G Wilson; P A Wingo; K Ebeling; D Kunde; P Nishan; J L Hopper; G Colditz; V Gajalanski; N Martin; T Pardthaisong; S Silpisornkosol; C Theetranont; B Boosiri; S Chutivongse; P Jimakorn; P Virutamasen; C Wongsrichanalai; M Ewertz; H O Adami; L Bergkvist; C Magnusson; I Persson; J Chang-Claude; C Paul; D C G Skegg; G F S Spears; P Boyle; T Evstifeeva; J R Daling; W B Hutchinson; K Malone; E A Noonan; J L Stanford; D B Thomas; N S Weiss; E White; N Andrieu; A Brêmond; F Clavel; B Gairard; J Lansac; L Piana; R Renaud; A Izquierdo; P Viladiu; H R Cuevas; P Ontiveros; A Palet; S B Salazar; N Aristizabel; A Cuadros; L Tryggvadottir; H Tulinius; A Bachelot; M G Lê; J Peto; S Franceschi; F Lubin; B Modan; E Ron; Y Wax; G D Friedman; R A Hiatt; F Levi; T Bishop; K Kosmelj; M Primic-Zakelj; B Ravnihar; J Stare; W L Beeson; G Fraser; R D Bullbrook; J Cuzick; S W Duffy; I S Fentiman; J L Hayward; D Y Wang; A J McMichael; K McPherson; R L Hanson; M C Leske; M C Mahoney; P C Nasca; A O Varma; A L Weinstein; T R Moller; H Olsson; J Ranstam; R A Goldbohm; P A van den Brandt; R A Apelo; J Baens; J R de la Cruz; B Javier; L B Lacaya; C A Ngelangel; C La Vecchia; E Negri; E Marubini; M Ferraroni; M Gerber; S Richardson; C Segala; D Gatei; P Kenya; A Kungu; J G Mati; L A Brinton; R Hoover; C Schairer; R Spirtas; H P Lee; M A Rookus; F E van Leeuwen; J A Schoenberg; M McCredie; M D Gammon; E A Clarke; L Jones; A Neil; M Vessey; D Yeates; P Appleby; E Banks; V Beral; D Bull; B Crossley; A Goodill; J Green; C Hermon; T Key; N Langston; C Lewis; G Reeves; R Collins; R Doll; R Peto; K Mabuchi; D Preston; P Hannaford; C Kay; L Rosero-Bixby; Y T Gao; F Jin; J-M Yuan; H Y Wei; T Yun; C Zhiheng; G Berry; J Cooper Booth; T Jelihovsky; R MacLennan; R Shearman; Q-S Wang; C-J Baines; A B Miller; C Wall; E Lund; H Stalsberg; X O Shu; W Zheng; K Katsouyanni; A Trichopoulou; D Trichopoulos; A Dabancens; L Martinez; R Molina; O Salas; F E Alexander; K Anderson; A R Folsom; B S Hulka; L Bernstein; S Enger; R W Haile; A Paganini-Hill; M C Pike; R K Ross; G Ursin; M C Yu; M P Longnecker; P Newcomb; L Bergkvist; A Kalache; T M M Farley; S Holck; O Meirik
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2002-11-18       Impact factor: 7.640

3.  Vitamins A, C and E and the risk of breast cancer: results from a case-control study in Greece.

Authors:  K Bohlke; D Spiegelman; A Trichopoulou; K Katsouyanni; D Trichopoulos
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  1999-01       Impact factor: 7.640

  3 in total

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