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Association of contralateral breast cancer risk with mammographic density defined at higher-than-conventional intensity thresholds.

Gordon P Watt ,
Julia A Knight ,
Tuong L Nguyen ,
Anne S Reiner ,
Kathleen E Malone ,
Esther M John ,
Charles F Lynch ,
Jennifer D Brooks ,
Meghan Woods ,
Xiaolin Liang ,
Leslie Bernstein ,
Malcolm C Pike ,
John L Hopper ,
Jonine L Bernstein

Abstract

Mammographic dense area (MDA) is an established predictor of future breast cancer risk. Recent studies have found that risk prediction might be improved by redefining MDA in effect at higher-than-conventional intensity thresholds. We assessed whether such higher-intensity MDA measures gave stronger prediction of subsequent contralateral breast cancer (CBC) risk using the Women's Environment, Cancer, and Radiation Epidemiology (WECARE) Study, a population-based CBC case-control study of ≥1 year survivors of unilateral breast cancer diagnosed between 1990 and 2008. Three measures of MDA for the unaffected contralateral breast were made at the conventional intensity threshold ("Cumulus") and at two sequentially higher-intensity thresholds ("Altocumulus" and "Cirrocumulus") using the CUMULUS software and mammograms taken up to 3 years prior to the first breast cancer diagnosis. The measures were fitted separately and together in multivariable-adjusted logistic regression models of CBC (252 CBC cases and 271 unilateral breast cancer controls). The strongest association with CBC was MDA defined using the highest intensity threshold, Cirrocumulus (odds ratio per adjusted SD [OPERA] 1.40, 95% CI 1.13-1.73); and the weakest association was MDA defined at the conventional threshold, Cumulus (1.32, 95% CI 1.05-1.66). In a model fitting the three measures together, the association of CBC with Cirrocumulus was unchanged (1.40, 95% CI 0.97-2.05), and the lower brightness measures did not contribute to the CBC model fit. These results suggest that MDA defined at a high-intensity threshold is a better predictor of CBC risk and has the potential to improve CBC risk stratification beyond conventional MDA measures.

More about this publication

International journal of cancer

Volume 151
Issue nr. 8
Pages 1304-1309
Publication date 15-10-2022

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1002/ijc.34001
Europe PubMed Central 35315524
Pubmed 35315524

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