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Reproductive Factors and Mammographic Density Within the International Consortium of Mammographic Density: A Cross-Sectional Study Publisher Pubmed

Summary: Research links higher parity and older age at first birth to increased breast density, a breast cancer risk factor. #BreastCancer #WomensHealth

Odriscoll J1 ; Burton A2, 3 ; Maskarinec G4 ; Perezgomez B5, 6 ; Vachon C7 ; Miao H8 ; Lajous M9 ; Lopezridaura R9 ; Eliassen AH10, 11 ; Pereira A12 ; Garmendia ML12 ; Tamimi RM13 ; Bertrand K14 ; Kwong A15, 16, 17 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Odriscoll J1
  2. Burton A2, 3
  3. Maskarinec G4
  4. Perezgomez B5, 6
  5. Vachon C7
  6. Miao H8
  7. Lajous M9
  8. Lopezridaura R9
  9. Eliassen AH10, 11
  10. Pereira A12
  11. Garmendia ML12
  12. Tamimi RM13
  13. Bertrand K14
  14. Kwong A15, 16, 17
  15. Ursin G18, 19, 20
  16. Lee E20
  17. Qureshi SA21
  18. Ma H23
  19. Vinnicombe S24
  20. Moss S25
  21. Allen S26
  22. Ndumia R27
  23. Vinayak S27
  24. Teo SH28, 29
  25. Mariapun S29
  26. Fadzli F30, 31
  27. Peplonska B32
  28. Nagata C33
  29. Stone J35
  30. Hopper JL36
  31. Giles G36, 37
  32. Ozmen V38
  33. Aribal ME39
  34. Schuz J3
  35. Van Gils CH40
  36. Wanders JOP40
  37. Sirous R41, 42
  38. Sirous M43
  39. Hipwell J44
  40. Kim J45
  41. Lee JW45
  42. Hartman M8, 46, 47
  43. Li J46, 48
  44. Scott C7
  45. Chiarelli AM49
  46. Linton L50
  47. Pollan M5, 6
  48. Flugelman AA51, 52
  49. Salem D53
  50. Kamal R53
  51. Boyd N50
  52. Dossantossilva I53, 54
  53. Mccormack V3
  54. Mullooly M1

Source: Breast Cancer Research Published:2024


Abstract

Background: Elevated mammographic density (MD) for a woman’s age and body mass index (BMI) is an established breast cancer risk factor. The relationship of parity, age at first birth, and breastfeeding with MD is less clear. We examined the associations of these factors with MD within the International Consortium of Mammographic Density (ICMD). Methods: ICMD is a consortium of 27 studies with pooled individual-level epidemiological and MD data from 11,755 women without breast cancer aged 35–85 years from 22 countries, capturing 40 country-& ethnicity-specific population groups. MD was measured using the area-based tool Cumulus. Meta-analyses across population groups and pooled analyses were used to examine linear regression associations of square-root (√) transformed MD measures (percent MD (PMD), dense area (DA), and non-dense area (NDA)) with parity, age at first birth, ever/never breastfed and lifetime breastfeeding duration. Models were adjusted for age at mammogram, age at menarche, BMI, menopausal status, use of hormone replacement therapy, calibration method, mammogram view and reader, and parity and age at first birth when not the association of interest. Results: Among 10,988 women included in these analyses, 90.1% (n = 9,895) were parous, of whom 13% (n = 1,286) had ≥ five births. The mean age at first birth was 24.3 years (Standard deviation = 5.1). Increasing parity (per birth) was inversely associated with √PMD (β: − 0.05, 95% confidence interval (CI): − 0.07, − 0.03) and √DA (β: − 0.08, 95% CI: − 0.12, − 0.05) with this trend evident until at least nine births. Women who were older at first birth (per five-year increase) had higher √PMD (β:0.06, 95% CI:0.03, 0.10) and √DA (β:0.06, 95% CI:0.02, 0.10), and lower √NDA (β: − 0.06, 95% CI: − 0.11, − 0.01). In stratified analyses, this association was only evident in women who were post-menopausal at MD assessment. Among parous women, no associations were found between ever/never breastfed or lifetime breastfeeding duration (per six-month increase) and √MD. Conclusions: Associations with higher parity and older age at first birth with √MD were consistent with the direction of their respective associations with breast cancer risk. Further research is needed to understand reproductive factor-related differences in the composition of breast tissue and their associations with breast cancer risk. © The Author(s) 2024.
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