Prediagnostic Sex Steroid Hormones in Relation to Male Breast Cancer Risk

Author:

Brinton Louise A.1,Key Tim J.1,Kolonel Laurence N.1,Michels Karin B.1,Sesso Howard D.1,Ursin Giske1,Van Den Eeden Stephen K.1,Wood Shannon N.1,Falk Roni T.1,Parisi Dominick1,Guillemette Chantal1,Caron Patrick1,Turcotte Véronique1,Habel Laurel A.1,Isaacs Claudine J.1,Riboli Elio1,Weiderpass Elisabete1,Cook Michael B.1

Affiliation:

1. Louise A. Brinton, Shannon N. Wood, Roni T. Falk, and Michael B. Cook, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda; Dominick Parisi, Information Management Services, Rockville, MD; Tim J. Key, University of Oxford, Oxford; Elio Riboli, Imperial College School of Public Health, London, United Kingdom; Laurence N. Kolonel, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI; Karin B. Michels, Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health; Karin B. Michels and Howard D. Sesso, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA;...

Abstract

Purpose Although previous studies have implicated a variety of hormone-related risk factors in the etiology of male breast cancers, no previous studies have examined the effects of endogenous hormones. Patients and Methods Within the Male Breast Cancer Pooling Project, an international consortium comprising 21 case-control and cohort investigations, a subset of seven prospective cohort studies were able to contribute prediagnostic serum or plasma samples for hormone quantitation. Using a nested case-control design, multivariable unconditional logistic regression analyses estimated odds ratios and 95% CIs for associations between male breast cancer risk and 11 individual estrogens and androgens, as well as selected ratios of these analytes. Results Data from 101 cases and 217 matched controls were analyzed. After adjustment for age and date of blood draw, race, and body mass index, androgens were found to be largely unrelated to risk, but circulating estradiol levels showed a significant association. Men in the highest quartile had an odds ratio of 2.47 (95% CI, 1.10 to 5.58) compared with those in the lowest quartile (trend P = .06). Assessment of estradiol as a ratio to various individual androgens or sum of androgens showed no further enhancement of risk. These relations were not significantly modified by either age or body mass index, although estradiol was slightly more strongly related to breast cancers occurring among younger (age < 67 years) than older men. Conclusion Our results support the notion of an important role for estradiol in the etiology of male breast cancers, similar to female breast cancers.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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