Houghton Lauren C, Ganmaa Davaasambuu, Rosenberg Philip S, Davaalkham Dambadarjaa, Stanczyk Frank Z, Hoover Robert N, Troisi Rebecca
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2016 Oct 31;13(11):1066. doi: 10.3390/ijerph13111066.
Breast cancer incidence rates are low but rising in urban Mongolia. We collected reproductive and lifestyle factor information and measured anthropometrics and serum sex steroid concentrations among 314 premenopausal women living in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Mean differences in hormone concentrations by these factors were calculated using age-adjusted quadratic regression splines. Estrone and estradiol in college-educated women were, respectively, 18.2% ( = 0.03) and 23.6% ( = 0.03) lower than in high-school-educated women. Progesterone concentrations appeared 55.8% lower ( = 0.10) in women residing in modern housing compared with women living in traditional housing (gers), although this finding was not statistically significant. Testosterone concentrations were positively associated with adiposity and central fat distribution % difference for highest vs. lowest quarter for body mass index (17.1% ( = 0.001)) and waist-to-height ratio (15.1% ( = 0.005)). Estrogens were higher in the follicular phase of women who breastfed each child for shorter durations. A distinct hormonal profile was associated with an urban lifestyle in premenopausal, Mongol women. In particular, heavier, more-educated women living in urban dwellings had higher testosterone and lower estrogen and progesterone levels. Higher breast cancer incidence in urban compared with rural women suggest that the hormonal profile associated with a more traditional lifestyle may be protective among Mongol women.
蒙古国城市地区乳腺癌发病率较低,但呈上升趋势。我们收集了314名居住在蒙古国乌兰巴托的绝经前女性的生殖和生活方式因素信息,并测量了人体测量指标和血清性激素浓度。使用年龄调整后的二次回归样条计算这些因素导致的激素浓度平均差异。大学学历女性的雌酮和雌二醇水平分别比高中学历女性低18.2%( = 0.03)和23.6%( = 0.03)。与居住在传统住房(蒙古包)中的女性相比,居住在现代住房中的女性孕酮浓度似乎低55.8%( = 0.10),尽管这一发现无统计学意义。睾酮浓度与肥胖及中心性脂肪分布呈正相关,按体重指数最高四分位数与最低四分位数计算差异百分比为17.1%( = 0.001),按腰高比计算为15.1%( = 0.005)。母乳喂养每个孩子时间较短的女性在卵泡期雌激素水平较高。绝经前蒙古女性的一种独特激素谱与城市生活方式相关。特别是,居住在城市住宅中的体重较重、受教育程度较高的女性睾酮水平较高,雌激素和孕酮水平较低。与农村女性相比,城市女性乳腺癌发病率较高,这表明与更传统生活方式相关的激素谱可能对蒙古女性具有保护作用。