Aarestrup J, Gamborg M, Ulrich L G, Sørensen T I A, Baker J L
Institute of Preventive Medicine, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, The Capital Region, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Department of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2016 Jul;40(7):1096-102. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2016.56. Epub 2016 Apr 28.
Endometrial cancer risk factors include adult obesity and taller stature, but the influence of size earlier in life is incompletely understood. We examined whether childhood body mass index (BMI; kg m(-2)) and height were associated with histologic subtypes of endometrial cancer.
From the Copenhagen School Health Records Register, 155 505 girls born 1930-1989 with measured weights and heights from 7 to 13 years were linked to health registers. BMI and height were transformed to age-specific z-scores. Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals were estimated by Cox regressions.
A total of 1020 endometrial cancers were recorded. BMI was non-linearly associated with all endometrial cancers, oestrogen-dependent cancers and the subtype of endometrioid adenocarcinomas; associations were statistically significant and positive above a z-score=0 and non-significant below zero. Compared with a 7-year-old girl with a BMI z-score=0, an equally tall girl who was 3.6 kg heavier (BMI z-score=1.5) had a hazard ratio=1.53 (95% confidence interval: 1.29-1.82) for endometrioid adenocarcinoma. BMI was not associated with non-oestrogen-dependent cancers, except at the oldest childhood ages. Height at all ages was statistically significant and positively associated with all endometrial cancers, except non-oestrogen-dependent cancers. At 7 years, per ~5.2 cm (1 z-score), the risk of endometrioid adenocarcinoma was 1.18 (95% confidence interval: 1.09-1.28). Among non-users of unopposed oestrogens, associations between BMI and endometrioid adenocarcinoma strengthened, but no effects on height associations were observed.
Endometrial carcinogenesis is linked to early-life body size, suggesting that childhood BMI and height may be useful indicators for the risk of later development of endometrial cancer and might aid in the early prevention of obesity-related endometrial cancers.
子宫内膜癌的风险因素包括成人肥胖和较高的身材,但生命早期体型的影响尚不完全清楚。我们研究了儿童体重指数(BMI;kg m(-2))和身高是否与子宫内膜癌的组织学亚型相关。
从哥本哈根学校健康记录登记处,将1930年至1989年出生的155505名7至13岁有测量体重和身高的女孩与健康登记处进行关联。BMI和身高被转换为特定年龄的z分数。通过Cox回归估计风险比(HRs)和95%置信区间。
共记录了1020例子宫内膜癌。BMI与所有子宫内膜癌、雌激素依赖性癌症以及子宫内膜样腺癌亚型呈非线性相关;在z分数=0以上,关联具有统计学意义且为正相关,在零以下则无统计学意义。与BMI z分数=0的7岁女孩相比,同样身高但体重重3.6 kg(BMI z分数=1.5)的女孩患子宫内膜样腺癌的风险比=1.53(95%置信区间:1.29 - 1.82)。BMI与非雌激素依赖性癌症无关,除了在儿童期最年长的年龄段。所有年龄段的身高与所有子宫内膜癌(非雌激素依赖性癌症除外)均具有统计学意义的正相关。7岁时,每增加约5.2 cm(即1个z分数),子宫内膜样腺癌的风险为1.18(95%置信区间:1.09 - 1.28)。在未使用无对抗雌激素的人群中,BMI与子宫内膜样腺癌之间的关联增强,但未观察到对身高关联的影响。
子宫内膜癌的发生与生命早期的体型有关,这表明儿童BMI和身高可能是后期发生子宫内膜癌风险的有用指标,并可能有助于早期预防肥胖相关的子宫内膜癌。