Division of Genetics and Epidemiology, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sir Richard Doll Building, London, SM2 5NG, UK.
Division of Breast Cancer Research, The Institute of Cancer Research, London, SW3 6JB, UK.
Breast Cancer Res. 2018 Oct 5;20(1):110. doi: 10.1186/s13058-018-1035-6.
Parity and age at first pregnancy are well-established risk factors for breast cancer, but the effects of other characteristics of pregnancies are uncertain and the literature is inconsistent.
In a cohort of 83,451 parous women from the general population of the UK, which collected detailed information on each pregnancy and a wide range of potential confounders, we investigated the associations of length of gestation and birthweight of offspring in a woman's pregnancies with her breast cancer risk, adjusting for a full range of non-reproductive as well as reproductive risk factors unlike in previous large studies.
Gestation of the first-born offspring was significantly inversely related to the risk of pre-menopausal breast cancer (p trend = 0.03; hazard ratio (HR) for 26-31 compared with 40-41 weeks, the baseline group, = 2.38, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.26-4.49), and was borderline significantly related to risk of breast cancer overall (p trend = 0.05). Risk was significantly raised in mothers of high birthweight first-born (HR for breast cancer overall = 1.53, 95% CI 1.06-2.21 for ≥ 4500 g compared with 3000-3499 g, the baseline group). For gestation and birthweight of most recent birth, there were no clear effects. Analyses without adjustment for confounders (other than age) gave similar results.
Our data add to evidence that short gestation pregnancies may increase the risk of breast cancer, at least pre-menopausally, perhaps by hormonal stimulation and breast proliferation early in pregnancy without the opportunity for the differentiation that occurs in late pregnancy. High birthweight first pregnancies may increase breast cancer risk, possibly through the association of birthweight with oestrogen and insulin-like growth factor 1 levels.
初产时的胎次和年龄是乳腺癌的既定危险因素,但其他妊娠特征的影响尚不确定,且文献结果不一致。
在英国普通人群中,有 83451 名经产妇女组成了一个队列,该队列详细记录了每个妊娠的情况和广泛的潜在混杂因素,我们研究了妊娠中胎儿的胎龄和出生体重与女性乳腺癌风险之间的关系,与之前的大型研究不同,我们在调整了一系列非生殖和生殖危险因素后,对这些关系进行了研究。
初产儿的胎龄与绝经前乳腺癌风险呈显著负相关(趋势检验 P=0.03;与基线组(40-41 周)相比,26-31 周的风险比为 2.38,95%置信区间为 1.26-4.49),且与总体乳腺癌风险呈临界显著相关(趋势检验 P=0.05)。初产儿出生体重较高的母亲乳腺癌风险显著升高(总体乳腺癌风险比为 1.53,95%置信区间为 4500 克以上与 3000-3499 克基线组相比为 1.06-2.21)。对于最近一次妊娠的胎龄和出生体重,没有明显的影响。未调整混杂因素(除年龄外)的分析得出了相似的结果。
我们的数据增加了证据表明,早产妊娠可能会增加乳腺癌的风险,至少在绝经前如此,这可能是由于妊娠早期的激素刺激和乳腺增生,而没有机会发生晚期妊娠时发生的分化。初产儿出生体重较高可能会增加乳腺癌风险,这可能与出生体重与雌激素和胰岛素样生长因子 1 水平有关。