Calle E E, Miracle-McMahill H L, Thun M J, Heath C W
American Cancer Society, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 1995 Apr 5;87(7):517-23. doi: 10.1093/jnci/87.7.517.
The results of several recent epidemiologic studies suggest that estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) in postmenopausal women may decrease their risk of subsequently developing colon or colorectal cancer. However, the association is not clear, as other similar studies have failed to show this inverse relationship.
The present study attempts a more definitive analysis of the relationship between fatal colon cancer and use of ERT among women in a large prospective study of adults in the United States.
Women were selected for study from the 676,526 female participants in Cancer Prevention Study II (CPS-II), a prospective mortality study of about 1.2 million American men and women (from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico), begun by the American Cancer Society in 1982. The median age of the female CPS-II participants was 56 years in 1982. Vital status was determined through December 31, 1989; 630,585 participants (93.2%) were still alive and 43,862 (6.5%) had died after 7 years of follow-up. Death certificates were obtained for 96.2% of participants known to have died. At the end of follow-up, 897 colon cancer deaths were observed in a cohort of 422,373 postmenopausal women who were cancer free at study entry. Cox proportional hazards modeling was used to compute rate ratios (RRs) and to adjust for other potential risk factors. The likelihood ratio test (two-sided) was used to determine the statistical significance of the interaction terms.
Ever use of ERT was associated with significantly decreased risk of fatal colon cancer (RR = 0.71; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.61-0.83). The reduction in risk was strongest among current users (RR = 0.55; 95% CI = 0.40-0.76), and there was a significant (P = .0001) trend of decreasing risk with increasing years of use among all users: Users of 1 year or less had an RR of 0.81 (95% CI = 0.63-1.03), while users of 11 years or more had an RR of 0.54 (95% CI = 0.39-0.76). These associations were not altered in multivariate analyses controlling for other risk factors.
In our data, estrogen therapy, particularly recent and long-term use, was associated with a substantial decrease in risk of fatal colon cancer. These results were consistent with several published studies suggesting a protective role of exogenous estrogens in the development of colorectal cancer and merit further investigation.
最近几项流行病学研究结果表明,绝经后女性使用雌激素替代疗法(ERT)可能会降低她们随后患结肠癌或结直肠癌的风险。然而,这种关联并不明确,因为其他类似研究未能显示出这种负相关关系。
在一项针对美国成年人的大型前瞻性研究中,本研究试图对致命性结肠癌与ERT使用之间的关系进行更确切的分析。
从癌症预防研究II(CPS-II)的676,526名女性参与者中选取女性进行研究,CPS-II是美国癌症协会于1982年启动的一项针对约120万美国男性和女性(来自所有50个州、哥伦比亚特区和波多黎各)的前瞻性死亡率研究。1982年CPS-II女性参与者的年龄中位数为56岁。至1989年12月31日确定生命状态;630,585名参与者(93.2%)仍存活,43,862名(6.5%)在7年随访后死亡。已知死亡的参与者中96.2%获得了死亡证明。随访结束时,在422,373名绝经后且研究开始时无癌症的女性队列中观察到897例结肠癌死亡。采用Cox比例风险模型计算率比(RRs)并对其他潜在风险因素进行校正。使用似然比检验(双侧)确定交互项的统计学显著性。
曾经使用ERT与致命性结肠癌风险显著降低相关(RR = 0.71;95%置信区间[CI] = 0.61 - 0.83)。当前使用者的风险降低最为明显(RR = 0.55;95% CI = 0.40 - 0.76),并且在所有使用者中,随着使用年限增加风险降低存在显著(P = 0.0001)趋势:使用1年或更短时间的使用者RR为0.81(95% CI = 0.63 - 1.03),而使用11年或更长时间的使用者RR为0.54(95% CI = 0.39 - 0.76)。在控制其他风险因素的多变量分析中,这些关联未改变。
在我们的数据中,雌激素治疗,尤其是近期和长期使用,与致命性结肠癌风险大幅降低相关。这些结果与几项已发表的研究一致,提示外源性雌激素在结直肠癌发生中具有保护作用,值得进一步研究。