Bremnes Yngve, Ursin Giske, Bjurstam Nils, Gram Inger T
Institute of Community Medicine, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway.
Breast Cancer Res. 2007;9(5):R73. doi: 10.1186/bcr1782.
Recent cohort studies have suggested an increased risk of breast cancer with long duration of smoking, and with smoking initiation before first birth. Cigarette smoking may have both carcinogenic effects and antiestrogenic effects on the breast tissue. We decided to examine the relationship between different measures of smoking exposure and mammographic density.
Lifetime smoking history was collected through interview and questionnaires among 907 postmenopausal participants in the Tromsø Mammography and Breast Cancer study. The mammograms were obtained from the governmental Norwegian Breast Cancer Screening Program. Mammograms were classified according to the percentage and absolute mammographic densities using a previously validated computer-assisted method.
Sixty-five percent of the women reported having ever smoked cigarettes, while 34% were current smokers. After adjustment for age, age at first birth, parity, age at menopause, postmenopausal hormone therapy use, and body mass index, smoking was inversely associated with both measures of mammographic density (both trends P < 0.01). Both current smokers and former smokers had significantly lower adjusted mean percentage mammographic density compared with never smokers (P = 0.003 and P = 0.006, respectively). An inverse dose-response relationship with mammographic density was found between both the number of cigarettes and the number of pack-years smoked among current smokers. Current smokers who smoked 11 cigarettes or more daily had a 3.7% absolute (36% relative difference) lower percentage mammographic density compared with current smokers who smoked seven cigarettes or less daily (P = 0.008). When former smokers were stratified according to time since smoking cessation, we found that women who had stopped smoking less than 24 years ago had a significantly lower mean percentage mammographic density compared with never smokers (P < 0.001).
We found modest inverse dose-response associations between numbers of cigarettes and of pack-years smoked and both measures of mammographic density among current smokers. Former smokers who had stopped smoking less than 24 years ago also had a statistically significantly lower mean percentage mammographic density when compared with never smokers. These findings are consistent with an antiestrogenic effect of cigarette smoking on the breast tissue.
近期的队列研究表明,长期吸烟以及首次生育前开始吸烟会增加患乳腺癌的风险。吸烟可能对乳腺组织具有致癌和抗雌激素作用。我们决定研究不同吸烟暴露指标与乳房X线密度之间的关系。
在特罗姆瑟乳房X线摄影与乳腺癌研究中,通过访谈和问卷调查收集了907名绝经后参与者的终生吸烟史。乳房X线照片来自挪威政府的乳腺癌筛查项目。使用先前验证的计算机辅助方法,根据乳房X线密度的百分比和绝对密度对乳房X线照片进行分类。
65%的女性报告曾经吸烟,34%为当前吸烟者。在调整年龄、首次生育年龄、产次、绝经年龄、绝经后激素治疗使用情况和体重指数后,吸烟与乳房X线密度的两项指标均呈负相关(两种趋势P<0.01)。当前吸烟者和既往吸烟者的调整后平均乳房X线密度百分比均显著低于从不吸烟者(分别为P = 0.003和P = 0.006)。在当前吸烟者中,香烟数量和吸烟包年数与乳房X线密度之间均存在负剂量反应关系。与每天吸7支或更少香烟的当前吸烟者相比,每天吸11支或更多香烟的当前吸烟者的乳房X线密度百分比绝对值低3.7%(相对差异36%)(P = 0.008)。当根据戒烟时间对既往吸烟者进行分层时,我们发现戒烟时间少于24年的女性的平均乳房X线密度百分比显著低于从不吸烟者(P<0.001)。
我们发现当前吸烟者的香烟数量和吸烟包年数与乳房X线密度的两项指标之间存在适度的负剂量反应关联。与从不吸烟者相比,戒烟时间少于24年的既往吸烟者的平均乳房X线密度百分比在统计学上也显著较低。这些发现与吸烟对乳腺组织的抗雌激素作用一致。