College of Osteopathic Medicine, University of New England, Biddeford, ME, USA.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2012 Oct;135(3):639-46. doi: 10.1007/s10549-012-2170-x. Epub 2012 Jul 31.
Observational studies have suggested that metformin decreases the incidence of several common cancers. However, findings regarding breast cancer have been mixed. In order to explore this issue, a systematic literature review and meta-analysis were performed with a focus on potential biases. We conducted a comprehensive literature search for all pertinent studies addressing metformin use and breast cancer risk by searching PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Scopus (which includes Embase, ISI Web of Science) using the Mesh terms: "metformin" or "biguanides" or "diabetes mellitus, type 2/therapy" and "cancer" or "neoplasms." When multiple hazard ratios (HR) or odds ratio (OR) were reported, the most adjusted estimate was used in the base-case analysis. We pooled the adjusted HR and performed sensitivity analyses on duration of metformin use (> or ≤3 years use), study quality (assessed using the GRADE system), and initial observation year of the cohort (before vs after 1997). From a total of 443 citations, 18 full-text articles were considered, and seven independent studies were included. All were observational (four cohort and three case control). Our combined OR of all seven studies was 0.83 (0.71-0.97). Stronger associations were found when analyses were limited to studies estimating the impact of longer metformin use (OR = 0.75. 95 % CI 0.62, 0.91) or among studies that began observing their cohort before 1997 (OR = 0.68. 95 % CI 0.55-0.084). Stratification according to study quality did not affect the combined OR but higher quality studies had smaller CI and achieved statistical significance. Interpretation is limited by the observational nature of reports and different comparison groups. Our analyses support a protective effect of metformin on breast cancer risk among postmenopausal women with diabetes. Clinical trials are needed for definitive determination of the role of metformin in breast cancer risk reduction.
观察性研究表明,二甲双胍可降低几种常见癌症的发病率。然而,关于乳腺癌的研究结果却存在差异。为了探讨这个问题,我们进行了一项系统的文献综述和荟萃分析,重点关注潜在的偏倚。我们使用 Mesh 术语在 PubMed、Cochrane 图书馆和 Scopus(包括 Embase、ISI Web of Science)中全面搜索了所有关于二甲双胍使用与乳腺癌风险的相关研究:“二甲双胍”或“双胍类”或“2 型糖尿病/治疗”和“癌症”或“肿瘤”。当报告了多个风险比(HR)或比值比(OR)时,在基础分析中使用了最调整的估计值。我们对调整后的 HR 进行了汇总,并对二甲双胍使用时间(> 或 = 3 年使用与< 3 年使用)、研究质量(使用 GRADE 系统评估)和队列的初始观察年份(1997 年之前与之后)进行了敏感性分析。从总共 443 条引文,考虑了 18 篇全文文章,纳入了 7 项独立的研究。所有研究均为观察性研究(4 项队列研究和 3 项病例对照研究)。我们对这 7 项研究的合并 OR 为 0.83(0.71-0.97)。当分析仅限于估计更长时间使用二甲双胍的影响的研究(OR=0.75,95%CI 0.62-0.91)或观察队列在 1997 年之前开始的研究(OR=0.68,95%CI 0.55-0.084)时,发现了更强的关联。根据研究质量进行分层并不影响合并 OR,但高质量研究的 CI 更小且具有统计学意义。解释受到报告的观察性性质和不同对照组的限制。我们的分析支持二甲双胍对绝经后糖尿病妇女乳腺癌风险的保护作用。需要进行临床试验以确定二甲双胍在降低乳腺癌风险中的作用。