Daily (12-hour) urine collections taken throughout the menstrual cycle were obtained from 30 young women who by genetic analysis were at risk for familial breast cancer, and from 30 control women carefully matched for age, height, and reproductive history. Steroids in the urine were extracted by glucuronidase hydrolysis, and the primary glucocorticoid, androgen, and estrogen hormones and their metabolites were measured by radioimmunoassay. Highly significant differences were observed only in the case of estrone and estradiol, with the high-risk subjects exhibiting lower values that the controls. This endocrine abnormality in young women at risk for breast cancer may be a potential discriminant for identifying women at risk for the disease in the population at large.
urinary estrogen glucuronides familial breast cancer risk, Fishman estrogen metabolism breast cancer risk biomarker, estrone estradiol urine radioimmunoassay menstrual cycle, low estrogen levels hereditary breast cancer young women, daily urine steroid collection menstrual cycle estrogen, glucuronidase hydrolysis steroid extraction urine analysis, endocrine abnormality breast cancer risk discriminant, Lynch familial breast cancer estrogen excretion pattern, estrogen metabolites menstrual cycle cancer risk assessment, reproductive endocrinology breast cancer hormonal markers
PMID 451553 451553 DOI 10.1126/science.451553 10.1126/science.451553
Cite this article
Fishman, J., Fukushima, D. K., O'Connor, J., & Lynch, H. T. (1979). Low urinary estrogen glucuronides in women at risk for familial breast cancer. *Science (New York, N.Y.)*, *204*(4397), 1089-1091. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.451553
Fishman J, Fukushima DK, O'Connor J, Lynch HT. Low urinary estrogen glucuronides in women at risk for familial breast cancer. Science. 1979;204(4397):1089-1091. doi:10.1126/science.451553
Fishman, Jack, et al. "Low urinary estrogen glucuronides in women at risk for familial breast cancer." *Science (New York, N.Y.)*, vol. 204, no. 4397, 1979, pp. 1089-1091.
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