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Radiation-associated breast cancer and gonadal hormone exposure: a report from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study.

Chaya S Moskowitz ,
Joanne F Chou ,
Charles A Sklar ,
Dana Barnea ,
Cécile M Ronckers ,
Danielle Novetsky Friedman ,
Joseph P Neglia ,
Lucie Turcotte ,
Rebecca M Howell ,
Tara O Henderson ,
Gregory T Armstrong ,
Wendy M Leisenring ,
Leslie L Robison ,
Flora E van Leeuwen ,
Malcolm C Pike ,
Kevin C Oeffinger

Abstract

METHODS

Participants included 1108 females from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study who were diagnosed with childhood cancer 1970-1986, treated with chest radiotherapy, and survived to ages ⩾20 years. Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) from Cox models adjusted for chest radiation field, delivered dose, anthracycline exposure, and age at childhood cancer estimated risk.

CONCLUSIONS

Endogenous hormones are key contributors to breast cancer observed among childhood cancer survivors. Hormone therapy given for premature ovarian insufficiency does not fully replace the function that endogenous hormones have in breast cancer development.

RESULTS

Among 195 women diagnosed with breast cancer, 102 tumours were oestrogen-receptor positive (ER+). Breast cancer risk increased with ⩾10 years of ovarian function after chest radiotherapy vs <10 years (HR=2.89, CI 1.56-5.53) and for radiotherapy given within 1 year of menarche vs >1 year from menarche (HR=1.80, CI 1.19-2.72). Risk decreased with decreasing age at menopause (Ptrend=0.014). Risk factors did not differ for ER+ breast cancer. Survivors with an age at menopause <20 years treated with hormone therapy had a lower breast cancer risk than premenopausal survivors (HR=0.47, CI 0.23-0.94).

BACKGROUND

The relationship between hormone exposure and breast cancer risk in women treated with chest radiotherapy for childhood cancer is uncertain.

More about this publication

British journal of cancer

Volume 117
Issue nr. 2
Pages 290-299
Publication date 11-07-2017

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/bjc.2017.169
Europe PubMed Central 28632729
Pubmed 28632729

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