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Roles of radiation dose, chemotherapy, and hormonal factors in breast cancer following Hodgkin's disease.

Flora E van Leeuwen ,
Willem J Klokman ,
Marilyn Stovall ,
Ellen C Dahler ,
Mars B van't Veer ,
Evert M Noordijk ,
Mariad A Crommelin ,
Berthe M P Aleman ,
Annegien Broeks ,
Mary Gospodarowicz ,
Lois B Travis ,
Nicola S Russell

Abstract

METHODS

We investigated the effects of radiation dose, chemotherapy (CT), and reproductive factors on breast cancer risk in a nested case-control study in The Netherlands in a cohort of 770 female patients who had been diagnosed with HD before age 41. Detailed treatment information and data on reproductive factors were collected for 48 case patients who developed breast cancer 5 or more years after diagnosis of HD and 175 matched control subjects. The radiation dose was estimated to the area of the breast where the case patient's tumor had developed and to a comparable location in matched control subjects. Relative risks (RRs) of breast cancer were calculated by conditional logistic regression. Statistical tests were two-sided.

CONCLUSION

Breast cancer risk increases with increasing radiation dose up to at least 40 Gy. The substantial risk reduction associated with CT may reflect its effect on menopausal age, suggesting that ovarian hormones promote tumorigenesis after radiation has produced an initiating event.

RESULTS

The risk of breast cancer increased statistically significantly with radiation dose (P(trend) =.01); patients who received 38.5 Gy or more had an RR of 4.5 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.3 to 16) times that of patients who received less than 4 Gy. Patients who received both CT and radiotherapy (RT) had a statistically significantly lower risk than those treated with RT alone (RR = 0.45, 95% CI = 0.22 to 0.91). Breast cancer risk increased with increasing radiation dose among patients who received RT only (RR = 12.7, 95% CI = 1.8 to 86, for patients receiving > or =38.5 Gy) but not among patients treated with CT and RT. Sixty-nine percent of control subjects treated with RT and more than six cycles of CT, but only 9% of those who received RT alone, reached menopause before age 41. Reaching menopause before age 36 was associated with a strongly reduced risk of breast cancer (RR = 0.06, 95% CI = 0.01 to 0.45).

BACKGROUND

Female survivors of Hodgkin's disease (HD) have a strongly elevated risk of breast cancer, but factors responsible for the increased risk are not well known.

More about this publication

Journal of the National Cancer Institute

Volume 95
Issue nr. 13
Pages 971-80
Publication date 02-07-2003

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1093/jnci/95.13.971
Europe PubMed Central 12837833
Pubmed 12837833

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