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Reproductive factors as risk modifiers of breast cancer in BRCA mutation carriers and high-risk non-carriers

Authors
Park, BoyoungHopper, John L.Win, Aung K.Dowty, James G.Sung, Ho KyungAhn, ChoonghyunKim, Sung-WonLee, Min HyukLee, JihyounLee, Jong WonKang, EunyoungYu, Jong-HanKim, Ku SangMoon, Byung-InHan, WonshikNoh, Dong-YoungPark, Sue K.
Issue Date
24-Nov-2017
Publisher
Impact Journals
Keywords
breast neoplasm; reproductive factors; BRCA1/2 mutation carriers; familial breast cancer; early onset breast cancer
Citation
Oncotarget, v.8, no.60, pp 102110 - 102118
Pages
9
Journal Title
Oncotarget
Volume
8
Number
60
Start Page
102110
End Page
102118
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/7038
DOI
10.18632/oncotarget.22193
ISSN
1949-2553
Abstract
This study was conducted to identify the role of reproductive factors as environmental modifiers for breast cancer (BC) risk in clinic-based, East-Asian BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers and non-carriers with high-risk criteria of BRCA mutations (family history (FH) of BC, early-onset BC (aged <= 40 years)). A total of 581 women who were BRCA carriers (222 BRCA1 and 359 BRCA2), 1,083 non-carriers with FH, and 886 non-carriers with early-onset BC were enrolled and interviewed to examine the reproductive factors, from 2007 to 2014. The hazard ratio (HR) and its 95% confidence interval (CI) in the weighted Cox regression model were used to calculate the BC risk based on the reproductive factors. Earlier menarche increased BC risk by 3.49-fold in BRCA2 mutation carriers (95% CI=2.03-6.00) and 3.30-fold in non-carriers with FH (95% CI=1.73-6.34), but was insignificantly associated with BRCA1 carriers and non-carriers for early-onset BC (P-heterogeneity=0.047). Higher parity decreased BC risk in BRCA carriers and non-carriers with FH, especially in BRCA1 carriers (HR=0.27, 95% CI=0.09-0.83 for two parity; and HR=0.23, 95% CI=0.05-1.00 for >= 3 parity), but increased the early-onset BC risk (HR=4.63, 95% CI=2.56-8.51 for > 3 parity, p-heterogeneity=0.045). Oral contraceptive (OC) use and longer estrogen exposure periods (>= 30 years) were associated with an increased risk of early-onset BC (HR=3.99, 95% CI=1.65-9.67; HR=7.69, 95% CI=1.96-25.01), while OC use was not associated with BC risk in other groups and longer estrogen exposure had rather decreased risk for BC risk (both p-heterogeneity<0.001). Several reproductive factors as risk modifiers could heterogeneously be associated with BC among BRCA1/2 mutation carriers, non-carriers with FH, and early-onset BC non-carriers.
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