Blair Lyndsey K, Warner Erica T, James Peter, Hart Jaime E, VoPham Trang, Barnard Mollie E, Newton Johnnie D, Murthy Divya J, Laden Francine, Tamimi Rulla M, DuPre Natalie C
Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, University of Louisville, School of Public Health and Information Sciences, Louisville, Kentucky.
Department of Medicine, Mongan Institute, Clinical Translational Epidemiology Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Environ Epidemiol. 2022 Jul 19;6(4):e216. doi: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000216. eCollection 2022 Aug.
Inverse associations between natural vegetation exposure (i.e., greenness) and breast cancer risk have been reported; however, it remains unknown whether greenness affects breast tissue development or operates through other mechanisms (e.g., body mass index [BMI] or physical activity). We examined the association between greenness and mammographic density-a strong breast cancer risk factor-to determine whether greenness influences breast tissue composition independent of lifestyle factors.
Women (n = 2,318) without a history of breast cancer underwent mammographic screening at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, from 2006 to 2014. Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) satellite data at 1-km resolution were used to estimate greenness at participants' residential address 1, 3, and 5 years before mammogram. We used multivariable linear regression to estimate differences in log-transformed volumetric mammographic density measures and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for each 0.1 unit increase in NDVI.
Five-year annual average NDVI was not associated with percent mammographic density in premenopausal (β = -0.01; 95% CI = -0.03, 0.02; = 0.58) and postmenopausal women (β = -0.02; 95% CI = -0.04, 0.01; = 0.18). Results were similar for 1-year and 3-year NDVI measures and in models including potential mediators of BMI and physical activity. There were also no associations between greenness and dense volume and nondense volume.
Greenness exposures were not associated with mammographic density.
Prior observations of a protective association between greenness and breast cancer may not be driven by differences in breast tissue composition, as measured by mammographic density, but rather other mechanisms.
已有报道称自然植被暴露(即绿化程度)与乳腺癌风险呈负相关;然而,绿化程度是影响乳腺组织发育还是通过其他机制(如体重指数[BMI]或身体活动)起作用仍不清楚。我们研究了绿化程度与乳腺X线密度(一种很强的乳腺癌风险因素)之间的关联,以确定绿化程度是否独立于生活方式因素影响乳腺组织成分。
2006年至2014年期间,在马萨诸塞州波士顿的布莱根妇女医院,对2318名无乳腺癌病史的女性进行了乳腺X线筛查。使用1公里分辨率的归一化植被指数(NDVI)卫星数据来估计参与者在乳腺X线检查前1年、3年和5年居住地址的绿化程度。我们使用多变量线性回归来估计NDVI每增加0.1个单位时,对数转换后的体积乳腺X线密度测量值的差异以及95%置信区间(CI)。
绝经前女性(β = -0.01;95%CI = -0.03,0.02;P = 0.58)和绝经后女性(β = -0.02;95%CI = -0.04,0.01;P = 0.18)的五年平均NDVI与乳腺X线密度百分比均无关联。1年和3年NDVI测量结果以及包括BMI和身体活动潜在中介因素的模型结果相似。绿化程度与致密体积和非致密体积之间也无关联。
绿化程度暴露与乳腺X线密度无关。
先前观察到的绿化程度与乳腺癌之间的保护关联可能不是由乳腺X线密度测量的乳腺组织成分差异驱动的,而是由其他机制驱动的。