 |  | 

ABSTRACT: Breast cancer risk in women with a primary ovarian cancer:
a case-control study
Register-based studies show that women with ovarian cancer are
at increased risk of developing breast cancer. Primary suggested
explanations are heredity factors and a common hormonal aetiology.
However, clinical surveillance that is provided for cancer patients
during, and after, treatment of their primary malignancies together
with possible mistakes in the registering procedures could affect
the risk estimates.
In order to examine these factors in women
registered with ovarian cancer who develop subsequent breast
cancer, a case-control study was performed. Using a regional
Swedish cancer registry including 5060 women registered with
ovarian cancer, 89 cases of breast cancer were found. After corrections
for discrepancies in the registered and recorded information,
75 cases remained, of which 72 cases were included in the study.
Information concerning possible risk factors were extracted from
hospital records and compared with 177 matched controls. Suggested
risk factors such as parity (relative risk (RR)=1.41), late age
at menopause (52-61 years; RR=1.61) and heredity for breast and/or
ovarian cancer (RR=1.50) were all connected with a non-significant
increased risk of subsequent breast cancer.
In all, 43% of the
breast cancer cases were revealed without preceding symptoms
at clinical follow-up, indicating that increased clinical surveillance
is a factor of importance when explaining the increased risk.
The fact that only 75 (missing records included) out of the 89
registered breast cancer cases could be linked to the preceding
ovarian cancer indicates that the actual risk of developing breast
cancer is smaller than previously described.
The clinical implications
from these findings could be that, beside general screening programmes
and health controls offered to women in cancer-prone families,
additional mammography examinations based on the assumption of
an increased risk of breast cancer are not warranted in ovarian
cancer patients.
12/12/2001; European Journal of Cancer
|
Remember we are NOT Doctors and have NO medical training.
This site is like an Encylopedia - there are many pages, many links on many topics.
Support our work with any size DONATION - see left side of any page - for how to donate. You can help raise awareness of CAM. |
|