Bandera Elisa V, Maskarinec Gertraud, Romieu Isabelle, John Esther M
Cancer Prevention and Control, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ; Department of Epidemiology, Rutgers School of Public Health, Piscataway, NJ;
University of Hawaii Cancer Center, Honolulu, HI;
Adv Nutr. 2015 Nov 13;6(6):803-19. doi: 10.3945/an.115.009647. Print 2015 Nov.
Obesity is a global concern, affecting both developed and developing countries. Although there are large variations in obesity and breast cancer rates worldwide and across racial/ethnic groups, most studies evaluating the impact of obesity on breast cancer risk and survival have been conducted in non-Hispanic white women in the United States or Europe. Given the known racial/ethnic differences in tumor hormone receptor subtype distribution, obesity prevalence, and risk factor profiles, we reviewed published data for women of African, Hispanic, and Asian ancestry in the United States and their countries of origin. Although the data are limited, current evidence suggests a stronger adverse effect of obesity on breast cancer risk and survival in women of Asian ancestry. For African Americans and Hispanics, the strength of the associations appears to be more comparable to that of non-Hispanic whites, particularly when accounting for subtype and menopausal status. Central obesity seems to have a stronger impact in African-American women than general adiposity as measured by body mass index. International data from countries undergoing economic transition offer a unique opportunity to evaluate the impact of rapid weight gain on breast cancer. Such studies should take into account genetic ancestry, which may help elucidate differences in associations between ethnically admixed populations. Overall, additional large studies that use a variety of adiposity measures are needed, because the current evidence is based on few studies, most with limited statistical power. Future investigations of obesity biomarkers will be useful to understand possible racial/ethnic biological differences underlying the complex association between obesity and breast cancer development and progression.
肥胖是一个全球性问题,影响着发达国家和发展中国家。尽管全球以及不同种族/族裔群体的肥胖率和乳腺癌发病率存在很大差异,但大多数评估肥胖对乳腺癌风险和生存影响的研究都是在美国或欧洲的非西班牙裔白人女性中进行的。鉴于已知肿瘤激素受体亚型分布、肥胖患病率和风险因素概况存在种族/族裔差异,我们回顾了美国非洲裔、西班牙裔和亚裔女性及其原籍国已发表的数据。尽管数据有限,但目前的证据表明,肥胖对亚裔女性乳腺癌风险和生存的不利影响更强。对于非裔美国人和西班牙裔,这种关联的强度似乎与非西班牙裔白人更具可比性,尤其是在考虑亚型和绝经状态时。与通过体重指数衡量的一般肥胖相比,中心性肥胖对非裔美国女性的影响似乎更强。来自经济转型国家的国际数据为评估体重快速增加对乳腺癌的影响提供了独特机会。此类研究应考虑遗传血统,这可能有助于阐明种族混合人群之间关联的差异。总体而言,需要更多使用多种肥胖测量方法的大型研究,因为目前的证据基于少数研究,大多数研究的统计效力有限。未来对肥胖生物标志物的研究将有助于了解肥胖与乳腺癌发生和发展之间复杂关联背后可能存在的种族/族裔生物学差异。