Hulka B S
Epidemiology Department, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 27599-7400, USA.
Prog Clin Biol Res. 1997;396:17-29.
This review focuses on etiologic factors and hormonal correlates of the three major gynecologic cancers-uterine cervix, uterine corpus and ovary- and breast cancer. The incidence rate of the three gynecologic cancers combined is only 40 percent of the breast cancer rate (43.6 vs 109.5 per 100,000), whereas the combined mortality rate is half that for breast cancer (14.3 vs 27.3 per 100,000). Cervical cancer is distinctive in that it's hormonal correlates are few; it exhibits the epidemiologic characteristics of a sexually transmitted disease. Integration of Human Papilloma Virus DNA types 16, 18 (or other) within the cellular genome has been identified in more than 80% of high grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasias and invasive carcinomas. Epithelial ovarian cancers occur most commonly in nulliparous, infertile women and familial carriers of BRCA1. Oral contraceptive (OC) use reduces ovarian cancer risk by at least one-half, a benefit which increases with increasing duration of use and persists for at least 15 years after discontinuation. Pregnancy and OCs suppress gonadotropin secretion, whereas fertility drugs enhance follicle-stimulating hormone production. These indicators of alterations in the hypothalmic-pituitary-ovarian axis provide some support for both the excess gonadotropin and the incessant ovulation theories of ovarian carcinogenesis. Endometrial carcinoma is the prototype hormonally-determined disease. Increased estrogen from either endogenous or exogenous sources increases risk. Lowering the estrogen load or adding progestin reduces risk. This explains the marked protection achieved by combined estrogen/progestin OC's and the dramatic increased risk uncurred by long-term estrogen replacement therapy (ERT). Breast tissue, also a target for sex steroid hormones, displays a more complex risk profile. Current ERT use increases breast cancer risk by about 30%; adding a progestin to the estrogen does not improve the situation (40% increased risk). Furthermore, OCs do not reduce breast cancer risk, but may increase it for current OC users under age 45. The magnitude of these hormonal effects is much smaller than that exhibited with endometrial cancer.
本综述聚焦于三种主要妇科癌症(子宫颈癌、子宫内膜癌和卵巢癌)以及乳腺癌的病因和激素关联。三种妇科癌症的合并发病率仅为乳腺癌发病率的40%(每10万人中分别为43.6例和109.5例),而合并死亡率则为乳腺癌的一半(每10万人中分别为14.3例和27.3例)。子宫颈癌的独特之处在于其激素关联较少;它表现出性传播疾病的流行病学特征。在超过80%的高级别宫颈上皮内瘤变和浸润性癌中,已发现人乳头瘤病毒16、18型(或其他类型)的DNA整合到细胞基因组中。上皮性卵巢癌最常见于未生育、不孕的女性以及BRCA1基因的家族携带者。使用口服避孕药可使卵巢癌风险降低至少一半,且随着使用时间的延长,这种益处会增加,停药后至少持续15年。妊娠和口服避孕药会抑制促性腺激素分泌,而促排卵药物会增加促卵泡激素的产生。下丘脑 - 垂体 - 卵巢轴变化的这些指标为卵巢癌发生的促性腺激素过多和持续排卵理论提供了一些支持。子宫内膜癌是典型的激素依赖性疾病。内源性或外源性雌激素增加都会增加患病风险。降低雌激素负荷或添加孕激素可降低风险。这就解释了联合雌激素/孕激素口服避孕药所带来的显著保护作用,以及长期雌激素替代疗法所导致的显著风险增加。乳腺组织也是性甾体激素的作用靶点,其风险情况更为复杂。目前使用雌激素替代疗法会使乳腺癌风险增加约30%;在雌激素中添加孕激素并不能改善这种情况(风险增加40%)。此外,口服避孕药并不能降低乳腺癌风险,但对于45岁以下的现用口服避孕药者,可能会增加风险。这些激素效应的程度远小于子宫内膜癌所表现出的程度。