Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2013 Feb;137(3):883-92. doi: 10.1007/s10549-012-2391-z. Epub 2013 Jan 3.
Plasma estrogen and androgen levels are positively associated with postmenopausal breast cancer risk, but how long a single blood measurement can predict risk and whether the associations vary by tumor hormone receptor status remain unclear. We conducted nested case-control analyses within the Nurses' Health Study. Blood samples were collected in 1989-1990 and again in 2000-2002. Among postmenopausal women not using postmenopausal hormones at blood collection, 707 cases were diagnosed through June 2010, with two matched controls per case. We used unconditional logistic regression analyses to estimate the relative risks controlling for other breast cancer risk factors. The intra-class correlation coefficients for two blood measurements collected 10 years apart ranged from 0.54 (dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, DHEAS) to 0.74 (sex hormone-binding globulin, SHBG). Overall, women in the top (vs. bottom) 25 % of levels of estradiol, free estradiol, testosterone, free testosterone, and DHEAS were at a 50-110 % higher risk of breast cancer (p (trend) < 0.001). SHBG was inversely associated with risk (p (trend) = 0.004). RRs were similar when comparing cases diagnosed 1-10 versus 11-20 years (or 16-20 years) after blood collection (p (interaction) > 0.2). Except for DHEAS, the associations varied significantly by hormone receptor status (p (heterogeneity) ≤ 0.02). For example, the RRs (95 % CIs) comparing the highest versus lowest quartile were 2.8 (2.0-4.0; p (trend) < 0.001) for ER +/PR + tumors versus 1.1 (0.6-2.1; p (trend) = 0.98) for ER-/PR- tumors for estradiol, and 1.8 (1.3-2.5; p (trend) < 0.001) versus 0.6 (0.3-1.2; p (trend) = 0.35) for testosterone. One measure of circulating sex hormones in postmenopausal women can predict risk of hormone receptor positive breast cancer for up to 16-20 years.
血浆雌激素和雄激素水平与绝经后乳腺癌风险呈正相关,但单次血液测量能预测风险的时间有多长,以及这些关联是否因肿瘤激素受体状态而异,目前仍不清楚。我们在护士健康研究中进行了嵌套病例对照分析。血液样本于 1989-1990 年采集,2000-2002 年再次采集。在血液采集时未使用绝经后激素的绝经后妇女中,707 例于 2010 年 6 月前确诊,每例病例匹配 2 名对照。我们使用非条件逻辑回归分析来估计控制其他乳腺癌危险因素后的相对风险。两次相隔 10 年采集的血液测量的组内相关系数范围为 0.54(硫酸脱氢表雄酮,DHEAS)至 0.74(性激素结合球蛋白,SHBG)。总体而言,雌二醇、游离雌二醇、睾酮、游离睾酮和 DHEAS 水平处于最高(vs. 最低)25%的女性乳腺癌风险增加 50-110%(p(趋势)<0.001)。SHBG 与风险呈负相关(p(趋势)=0.004)。与血液采集后 1-10 年或 11-20 年(或 16-20 年)相比,病例诊断时间的差异无统计学意义(p(交互作用)>0.2)。除 DHEAS 外,这些关联因激素受体状态而异(p(异质性)≤0.02)。例如,与最低四分位相比,最高四分位的相对风险(95%置信区间)为 ER+/PR+肿瘤的 2.8(2.0-4.0;p(趋势)<0.001),ER-/PR-肿瘤的 1.1(0.6-2.1;p(趋势)=0.98)为雌二醇,ER+/PR+肿瘤的 1.8(1.3-2.5;p(趋势)<0.001),ER-/PR-肿瘤的 0.6(0.3-1.2;p(趋势)=0.35)为睾酮。绝经后女性循环性激素的一项测量可以预测激素受体阳性乳腺癌长达 16-20 年的风险。