UCLA Cancer Prevention and Control Research, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, A2-125 CHS, mc 690015, 650 Charles Young Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90095-6900, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2013 Aug;24(8):1491-503. doi: 10.1007/s10552-013-0226-9. Epub 2013 May 17.
Some cancers are largely preventable through modification of certain behavioral risk factors and preventive screening, even among those with a family history of cancer. This study examined the associations between (1) family cancer history and cancer screening, (2) family history and cancer preventive lifestyle behaviors, and (3) cancer screening and lifestyle behaviors.
Data were from the 2009 California Health Interview Survey (n = 12,603). Outcomes included screening for breast cancer (BC) and colorectal cancer (CRC) and six cancer preventive lifestyle behaviors, based on World Cancer Research Fund recommendations. Multivariate logistic regression analyses, stratified by gender and race-ethnicity, examined associations. Predicted probabilities of cancer screening by family cancer history, race-ethnicity, and sex were computed.
Family history of site-specific cancer-CRC for men and women, and BC for women-was associated with higher probability of cancer screening for most groups, especially for CRC, but was largely unrelated to other lifestyle behaviors. In the few cases in which family history was significantly associated with lifestyle-for example, physical activity among White and Latino males, smoking among White and Asian females-individuals with a family history had lower odds of adherence to recommendations than those with no family history. Greater overall adherence to lifestyle recommendations was associated with higher odds of up-to-date CRC screening among White and Asian males, and lower odds among Asian females (no significant association with BC screening); this relationship did not vary by family cancer history.
The fact that family history of cancer is not associated with better lifestyle behaviors may reflect shared behavioral risks within families, or the lack of knowledge about how certain lifestyle behaviors impact personal cancer risk. Findings can inform interventions aimed at lifestyle behavioral modification for individuals at increased cancer risk due to family history.
通过改变某些行为风险因素和预防性筛查,即使在有癌症家族史的人群中,某些癌症也可以在很大程度上得到预防。本研究探讨了(1)家族癌症史与癌症筛查、(2)家族史与癌症预防生活方式行为、(3)癌症筛查与生活方式行为之间的关系。
数据来自 2009 年加利福尼亚健康访谈调查(n=12603)。基于世界癌症研究基金会的建议,将乳腺癌(BC)和结直肠癌(CRC)筛查以及 6 种癌症预防生活方式行为作为结局纳入研究。采用多变量逻辑回归分析,按性别和种族-族裔进行分层,分析关联。通过家族癌症史、种族-族裔和性别计算癌症筛查的预测概率。
男性和女性的结直肠癌家族史以及女性的乳腺癌家族史与大多数人群的癌症筛查概率较高相关,特别是结直肠癌,但与其他生活方式行为关系不大。在家族史与生活方式行为显著相关的少数情况下,例如,白人和拉丁裔男性的体育活动、白人和亚裔女性的吸烟行为,有家族史的个体与无家族史的个体相比,遵守建议的可能性较低。总体上更遵守生活方式建议与白人和亚裔男性的 CRC 筛查率较高相关,与亚裔女性的 CRC 筛查率较低相关(与 BC 筛查无显著关联);这种关系不受家族癌症史的影响。
家族癌症史与更好的生活方式行为无关的事实可能反映了家庭内部存在共同的行为风险,或者缺乏关于某些生活方式行为如何影响个人癌症风险的知识。这些发现可以为针对因家族史而增加癌症风险的个体的生活方式行为改变干预措施提供信息。