Endogenous estrogens and breast cancer risk: The case for prospective cohort studies

被引:54
作者
Toniolo, PG [1 ]
机构
[1] NYU, SCH MED, KAPLAN CANC CTR, NEW YORK, NY 10010 USA
关键词
breast neoplasms; estrogens; estrone; estradiol; sex hormone-binding globulin;
D O I
10.2307/3433375
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
It is generally agreed that estrogens, and possibly androgens, are important in the etiology of breast cancer, but no consensus exists as to the precise estrogenic or androgenic environment that characterizes risk, or the exogenous factors that influence the hormonal milieu. Nearly all the epidemiological studies conducted in the 1970s and 1980s were hospital-based case-control studies in which specimen sampling was performed well after the clinical appearance of the disease. Early prospective cohort studies also had limitations in their small sample sizes or short follow-up periods. However, more recent case-control studies nested within large cohorts, such as the New York University Women's Health Study and the Ormoni e Dieta nell'Eziologia dei Tumori study in Italy, are generating new data indicating that increased levels of estrone, estradiol and bioavailable estradiol, as well as their androgenic precursors, may be associated with a 4- to 6-fold increase in the risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. Further new evidence, which complements and expands the observations from the latter studies, shows that women with the thickest bone density, which may be a surrogate for cumulated exposure to hormones, experience severalfold increased risk of subsequent breast cancer as compared to women with thin bones. These data suggests that endogenous sex hormones are a key factor in the etiology of postmenopausal breast cancer. New prospective cohort studies should be conducted to examine the role of endogenous sex hormones in blood and urine samples obtained early in the natural history of breast cancer jointly with an assessment of bone density and of other important risk factors, such as mammographic density, physical activity, body weight, and markers of individual susceptibility, which may confer increased risk through an effect on the metabolism of endogenous hormones or through specific metabolic responses to Western lifestyle and diet.
引用
收藏
页码:587 / 592
页数:6
相关论文
共 74 条
[1]   SERUM CONCENTRATIONS OF ESTRONE, ANDROSTENEDIONE, TESTOSTERONE AND SEX-HORMONE-BINDING GLOBULIN IN POST-MENOPAUSAL WOMEN WITH BREAST-CANCER AND IN AGE-MATCHED CONTROLS [J].
ADAMI, HO ;
JOHANSSON, EDB ;
VEGELIUS, J ;
VICTOR, A .
UPSALA JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCES, 1979, 84 (03) :259-274
[2]   DIET AND PLASMA ANDROGENS IN POSTMENOPAUSAL VEGETARIAN AND OMNIVOROUS WOMEN AND POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN WITH BREAST-CANCER [J].
ADLERCREUTZ, H ;
HAMALAINEN, E ;
GORBACH, SL ;
GOLDIN, BR ;
WOODS, MN ;
DWYER, JT .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, 1989, 49 (03) :433-442
[3]   INTERNATIONAL DIFFERENCES IN BODY HEIGHT AND WEIGHT AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO CANCER INCIDENCE [J].
ALBANES, D ;
TAYLOR, PR .
NUTRITION AND CANCER-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 1990, 14 (01) :69-77
[4]   HORMONE LEVELS IN OLDER WOMEN - A STUDY OF POSTMENOPAUSAL BREAST-CANCER PATIENTS AND HEALTHY POPULATION-CONTROLS [J].
BERNSTEIN, L ;
ROSS, RK ;
PIKE, MC ;
BROWN, JB ;
HENDERSON, BE .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 1990, 61 (02) :298-302
[5]   ENDOGENOUS HORMONES AND BREAST-CANCER RISK [J].
BERNSTEIN, L ;
ROSS, RK .
EPIDEMIOLOGIC REVIEWS, 1993, 15 (01) :48-65
[6]   Serum sex hormone levels after menopause and subsequent breast cancer [J].
Berrino, F ;
Muti, P ;
Micheli, A ;
Bolelli, G ;
Krogh, V ;
Sciajno, R ;
Pisani, P ;
Panico, S ;
Secreto, G .
JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 1996, 88 (05) :291-296
[7]   NON-PROTEIN BOUND ESTRADIOL, SEX-HORMONE BINDING GLOBULIN, BREAST-CANCER AND BREAST-CANCER RISK [J].
BRUNING, PF ;
BONFRER, JMG ;
HART, AAM .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 1985, 51 (04) :479-484
[8]   BODY MEASUREMENTS, ESTROGEN AVAILABILITY AND THE RISK OF HUMAN BREAST-CANCER - A CASE-CONTROL STUDY [J].
BRUNING, PF ;
BONFRER, JMG ;
HART, AAM ;
VANNOORD, PAH ;
VANDERHOEVEN, H ;
COLLETTE, HJA ;
BATTERMANN, JJ ;
DEJONGBAKKER, M ;
NOOIJEN, WJ ;
DEWAARD, F .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, 1992, 51 (01) :14-19
[9]   RELATION BETWEEN RISK OF BREAST-CANCER AND BIOLOGICAL AVAILABILITY OF ESTRADIOL IN THE BLOOD - PROSPECTIVE-STUDY IN GUERNSEY [J].
BULBROOK, RD ;
MOORE, JW ;
CLARK, GMG ;
WANG, DY ;
MILLIS, RR ;
HAYWARD, JL .
ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 1986, 464 :378-388
[10]   Bone mineral density and risk of breast cancer in older women - The study of osteoporotic fractures [J].
Cauley, JA ;
Lucas, FL ;
Kuller, LH ;
Vogt, MT ;
Browner, WS ;
Cummings, SR .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1996, 276 (17) :1404-1408