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Epidemiology of breast cancer. Rulla Tamimi, ScD Associate Professor of Medicine Harvard Medical School. Outline. Descriptive epidemiology Established risk factors for breast cancer Epidemiologic data Biologic mechanisms Incorporating pathology into breast cancer epidemiology
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Epidemiology of breast cancer Rulla Tamimi, ScD Associate Professor of Medicine Harvard Medical School
Outline • Descriptive epidemiology • Established risk factors for breast cancer • Epidemiologic data • Biologic mechanisms • Incorporating pathology into breast cancer epidemiology • Examples from the Nurses’ Health Study
Breast Cancer • The most common malignancy in the US • Estimated 230,480 new invasive cases in 2011 • 2nd most common cause of cancer death • Estimated 39,520 breast cancer deaths in 2011 • Over 2 million breast cancer survivors in US ACS, www.cancer.org
2012 Estimated US Cancer Cases* Men848,170 Women790,740 • 29% Breast • 14% Lung & bronchus • 9% Colon & rectum • 6% Uterine corpus • 5% Thyroid • 4% Non-Hodgkin lymphoma • 4% Melanoma of skin • 3% Ovary • 3% Kidney • 3% Pancreas • 20% All Other Sites Prostate 29% Lung & bronchus 14% Colon & rectum 9% Urinary bladder 7% Melanoma of skin 5% Kidney 5% Non-Hodgkin 4% lymphoma Oral cavity 3% Leukemia 3% Pancreas 3% All Other Sites 18% *Excludes basal and squamous cell skin cancers and in situ carcinomas except urinary bladder. Source: American Cancer Society, 2011.
Age standardized incidence and mortality rates, 2008 Incidence Mortality Rates per 100,000 females
Trends in breast cancer incidence in the US Krieger, N. Int. J. Epidemiol. 2008 37:627-637; doi:10.1093/ije/dyn055
Preventability • International variation • 4-5 fold variability in rates worldwide • Trends across time within countries • Migration studies • Changes in rates in women moving from low risk to high countries • Usually in 1-2 generations • Vice versa
Long history of study • 1880’s family history • 1920’s reproductive risk factors • 1950’s menopause • 1970 – early 2000s • oral contraceptives, postmenopausal hormones, diet, physical activity, obesity, endogenous hormones, SERMs • 2000—onward • Incorporation of ER/PR and other tissue markers
Established Risk factors • Age • Gender • Family history • Benign breast disease • Reproductive factors • Endogenous hormones • Exogenous hormones • Adiposity • Diet • Physical activity • Alcohol • Lactation • Radiation • Mammographic Density
Age at menarche • Later age - lower risk • Age 15 vs age 11 gives 30% lower risk • Menarche represents the development of mature hormonal environment • Factors associated with early menarche: • Lack of physical activity • Diet • Childhood infections
Lifetime exposure to estradiol Serum estradiol pmol/l 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Menopause Menarche
Pregnancy and age at first birth • Nulliparous women are at increased risk of breast cancer • Risk is evident after age 40-45 • Short term increased risk with pregnancy • Younger age at 1st full-term pregnancy is associated with reduced risk
Lactation and reduced risk • Strong evidence from many studies • Recent US studies show even modern levels of breast feeding associated with lower risk • Consistent dose response independent of parity
Duration of breast feeding Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, Lancet 2002
Menopause • Early menopause reduces risk • Women with bilateral oophorectomy before age 45 had 50% reduced risk compared with women with natural menopause at 55+ • On average, 3% increase in risk with each year delay in menopause • High circulating hormones levels after menopause increase risk
Pike model • Factors associated with reduced risk of breast cancer were considered to lower the rate of breast tissue aging • Pike et. al., Nature 1983;303:767-70 • Breast tissue ageing…translates to mean the rate of cell division and accumulation of molecular damage on the pathway to breast cancer
Hormones and breast cancer • Endogenous • Premenopausal • Postmenopausal • Exogenous
Mechanisms for hormonal effects • Stimulation of mitosis • Increased chance of mutation being replicated • More cells at risk of mutation • Stimulation of tumor growth • Genotoxic metabolites??
Estradiol, progesterone, and mitotic rate of breast epithelial cells Estradiol, pmol/l, or progesterone, nmol/l x 10 Mitotic rate 700 3.0 Mitotic rate 600 2.5 Progesterone 500 Estradiol 2.0 400 1.5 300 1.0 200 0.5 100 0 0.0 1 8 15 22 Day of menstrual cycle Based on data from Ferguson & Anderson et al 1981, Williams et al 1991
Estrogen Estrogen Premenopause adrenals Postmenopause Androgens ovaries adipose
Estradiol by BMI Serum estradiol pmol/L Endogenous Hormones Collaborative Group JNCI 2003 <22.5 22.5-24.9 25.0-27.4 27.5-29.9 ≥30.0 BMI
Endogenous hormones and breast cancer collaborative group • Pooled analyses of prospective studies of endogenous hormones and breast cancer • Aims • Precise estimates of risks • Identify hormone most closely associated with risk • First meeting held in July 2000 in Oxford • Collaborators: scientists from original studies; analysis group in Oxford
Study-specific results for total estradiol Endogenous Sex Hormones Group, JNCI, 2002;94:617-29
Weight and weight gain • Complex relationship by menopausal status • Premenopausal breast cancer: • BMI is inversely associated with risk • Adult BMI and weight gain increases risk of postmenopausal breast cancer • seen most clearly among postmenopausal women who never have used hormones • 20 kg gain from age 18 associated with doubling in risk of breast cancer vs. stable weight
Weight Change Since Age 18 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 p-trend<0.001 Relative Risk ≥10kg 5-9.9 2-4.9 ±22-4.9 5-9.9 10-19.9 20-24.9 ≥25kg Loss No Change Gain Eliassen, 2006
Weight Change After Menopause 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 p-trend=0.002 Relative Risk ≥10kg 5-9.9 2-4.9±22-4.9 5-9.9 ≥10kg No Change Loss Gain
Risk post cessation of PMH Collins et al, Human Reproduction Update 2005
Age-adjusted incidence of invasive breast cancer, white women, age 45 to 74, California, 1996 to 2004 Robbins, A. S. et al. J Clin Oncol; 25:3437-3439 2007
Lifetime Exposure to Estradiol Serum estradiol pmol/L 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Menopause Menarche PMH & Weight
Oral contraceptives • Combined data from 54 studies • Current use increases risk (RR=1.24) • Increased risk declines after stopping use • No excess risk 10 or more years after stopping
Alcohol • Increasing risk with increasing amount of alcohol consumed • Consistent finding in over 50 studies • Hormonal mechanism likely pathway • 1 drink per day increases risk to age 70 by approximately 7% compare to never drinker
Physical activity • Evidence from more than 30 studies • Typical reduction in risk with 4 hours per week = 20% decrease in risk • 2002—IARC concluded that there was “convincing” evidence that physical activity reduced risk of breast cancer • Mechanism may vary by period of life
Attributable risk • Overall evidence points to accumulation of risk through the life course • Estimated that 45-55% of breast cancer cases in the US can be explained by known factors • late AFB, nulliparity, family history, early menarche, high SES, and BBD. • Estimated that reproductive differences could explain half of the difference in rates between US and China
Heterogeneity of breast tumors • Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease • ER/PR • Known to influence prognosis and response to treatment • Important for studying the epidemiology of breast cancer • Estrogen and progesterone act through the ER and PR • Helps understand the biology
The distribution of ER and PR tumors among incident invasive breast cancer cases in the NHS (1980-2000) by age at cancer diagnosis ER-/PR- (square-hatched bars), ER-/PR+ (vertical-stripe bars), ER+/PR- (open bars), and ER+/PR+ (solid bars). Colditz, G. A. et al. J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 2004 96:218-228; doi:10.1093/jnci/djh025
Weight Change Since Age 18 ER+/PR+ ER-/PR- 4 3 2 1 Relative Risk p-trend<0.001 p-trend=0.13 p-heterogeneity=0.01 ----Loss---- No Change ------------Gain------------ ----Loss---- No Change ------------Gain------------
Weight Change After Menopause ER+/PR+ ER-/PR- 2 1 Relative Risk p-trend<0.001 p-trend=0.75 p-heterogeneity=0.02 -------Loss------- No Change --------Gain------- -------Loss------- No Change --------Gain-------
Association between mammographic density and ER status Yaghjyan et al, 2011
Breast cancer subtypes Sorlie et al, 2003