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  • age at birth  (2)
  • multiple births  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cancer causes & control 10 (1999), S. 43-49 
    ISSN: 1573-7225
    Keywords: age at birth ; case-control ; endometrial cancer ; parity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objectives: Several studies have found an inverse association between older age at last birth and endometrial cancer risk. A nested case-control study was undertaken to examine the influence of this and other aspects of reproductive patterns on the risk of developing endometrial cancer. Methods: Among women born in 1925 and later, 4,839 eligible patients were identified in the Swedish Cancer Register. For each case, five individually age-matched controls were randomly selected from a population-based Fertility Register. Relative risks were estimated from odds ratios obtained from conditional logistic regression analyses. Results: Compared to uniparous women, childless women were at a higher risk of endometrial cancer (odds ratio [OR]=1.38, 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.25–1.52). This association was stronger in younger (〈50 years) than in older (50+ years) women. At all ages of first birth, a delivery was associated with a reduced risk of endometrial cancer that slowly diminished with time. Among parous women, the risk decreased by almost 20% for each additional live birth (OR=0.81, CI=0.78–0.84). In an analysis limited to women with two or more births that compared the independent effects of age at first and at last birth, only older age at last birth was associated with a lowered risk of endometrial cancer. The risk decreased at a rate of about 15% per five-year delay of last birth. Conclusions: Endometrial cancer is often referred to as the prototype hormonally-determined disease in women. However, our findings give further support to the hypothesis that a birth may not only affect risk through hormonal influences, but possibly also through mechanical shedding of cells that have undergone malignant transformation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-7217
    Keywords: age at birth ; breast cancer ; epidemiology ; reproductive factors ; risk factors
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Associations between parity and the risk of breast cancer, and the relative importance of age at first and age at last birth on breast cancer risk, were estimated in a case-control study nested in a nation-wide cohort of Swedish women born between 1925 and 1960. A total of 12,782 women with breast cancer and five times as many individually age-matched controls, aged less than 60 years with concomitant fertility information, were included in the analysis. Increasing parity was associated with a pronounced decrease in the risk of breast cancer with each additional birth conferring a 10 percent risk reduction (odds ratio 0.90 [95% CI 0.88–0.91]). In an analysis limited to women with two or more parities, and after adjustment for the effects of ages at interim births, the risk of breast cancer increased by about 13 percent for each five-year increment in age at first birth (odds ratio 1.13 [1.08–1.19]). For every five year-increase in age at last birth there was a small risk increase of marginal statistical significance (odds ratio 1.05 [1.01–1.09]). The present findings contradict recent claims that age at last birth has a stronger effect than age at first birth on breast cancer risk. The dominance of age at first birth as risk modulator is likely to reflect the protection afforded by the terminal differentiation of breast cells induced by a first pregnancy.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-7225
    Keywords: Breast neoplasms ; multiple births ; pregnancy ; Sweden ; twinning
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: The association between multiple births and subsequent maternal breast cancer risk was explored in a nested case-control study in Sweden encompassing 19,368 parous women with breast cancer diagnosed up to age 65 years, and 100,459 parous controls. Among cases and controls, there were 329 and 2,031 women, respectively, with a history of at least one live multiple birth. Compared with singleton mothers, breast cancer risk was 12 percent lower (odds ratio=0.088, 95 percent confidence interval=0.78–0.99) in women who had had a multiple birth. After stratification for age at diagnosis, evidence of a significant inverse association was found only in women aged 54 years or younger. Birth order of the multiple pregnancy had no apparent risk-modifying effect. Age at earliest multiple birth was unrelated to breast cancer risk. The inverse association between twinning and breast cancer risk may reflect protective physiological features of twin pregnancies. Further research is needed to investigate the role, if any, of in creased levels of steroid hormone-binding globulins in mothers of twins and the proposed inhibitory effects of human chorionic gonadotropin and α-fetoprotein, both of which are increased during multiple gestations, on breast carcinogenesis. Breast feeding patterns in mothers of twins also may modify their risk of developing breast cancer.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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