Use of four biomarkers to evaluate the risk of breast cancer subtypes in the women's contraceptive and reproductive experiences study

Cancer Research, 70(2), 575-587

DOI 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-09-3460 PMID 20068186 Source

Abstract

Epidemiologic studies suggest that some hormone-related risk factors in breast cancer differentially influence risk for disease subtypes classified by the status of the estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER/PR). However, it remains unclear whether human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) or p53 expression status further differentiates these exposure-risk group associations. We evaluated the associations of oral contraceptive (OC) use and reproductive factors with incident invasive breast cancer subtypes among 1,197 population-based cases and 2,015 controls from the Los Angeles County or Detroit components of the Women's Contraceptive and Reproductive Experiences Study. Case-control comparisons by ER/PR/HER2/p53 status were conducted by multivariable polychotomous unconditional logistic regression methods. We found that OC use was not associated with any breast cancer subtype as defined by ER/PR/HER2/p53 status, except for a 2.9-fold increased risk of so-called triple-negative tumors (ER(-)/PR(-)/HER2(-)) among women of 45 to 64 years of age who started OC use before age 18. Parity was associated with a decreased risk of luminal A (ER(+) or PR(+), HER2(-)), luminal B (ER(+) or PR(+)/HER2(+)), and ER(-)/PR(-)/HER2(+) tumors. Age at first full-term pregnancy was positively associated with luminal A tumors among older women. Neither of these reproductive factors was associated with triple-negative tumors. Long duration of breast-feeding lowered the risk of triple-negative and luminal A tumors. p53 status did not define further differential risk patterns. Our findings offer evidence of differences in the hormone-related risk factors between triple-negative cancers and other ER/PR/HER2-defined subtypes of breast cancer.

Topics

oral contraceptives breast cancer risk, triple negative breast cancer contraception, breastfeeding breast cancer protection, parity breast cancer subtypes, reproductive factors breast cancer, hormone receptor breast cancer contraception, age first pregnancy breast cancer, long duration breastfeeding cancer prevention, birth control pills cancer risk, natural family spacing cancer outcomes, estrogen receptor breast cancer oral contraceptives, lactation breast cancer risk reduction

Cite this article

Ma, H., Wang, Y., Sullivan-Halley, J., Weiss, L., Marchbanks, P. A., Spirtas, R., Ursin, G., Burkman, R. T., Simon, M. S., Malone, K. E., Strom, B. L., McDonald, J. A., Press, M. F., & Bernstein, L. (2010). Use of four biomarkers to evaluate the risk of breast cancer subtypes in the women's contraceptive and reproductive experiences study. *Cancer Research*, *70*(2), 575-587. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-09-3460

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