Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes.

Standard

Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes. / Slanger, Tracy E; Chang-Claude Jenny, C; Obi-Osius, Nadia; Kropp, Silke; Berger, Jürgen; Vettorazzi, Eik; Braendle, Wilhelm; Bastert, Gunter; Hentschel, Stefan; Flesch-Janys, Dieter.

in: CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR, Jahrgang 18, Nr. 4, 4, 2009, S. 1188-1196.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Slanger, TE, Chang-Claude Jenny, C, Obi-Osius, N, Kropp, S, Berger, J, Vettorazzi, E, Braendle, W, Bastert, G, Hentschel, S & Flesch-Janys, D 2009, 'Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes.', CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR, Jg. 18, Nr. 4, 4, S. 1188-1196. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19336542?dopt=Citation>

APA

Slanger, T. E., Chang-Claude Jenny, C., Obi-Osius, N., Kropp, S., Berger, J., Vettorazzi, E., Braendle, W., Bastert, G., Hentschel, S., & Flesch-Janys, D. (2009). Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes. CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR, 18(4), 1188-1196. [4]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19336542?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Slanger TE, Chang-Claude Jenny C, Obi-Osius N, Kropp S, Berger J, Vettorazzi E et al. Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes. CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR. 2009;18(4):1188-1196. 4.

Bibtex

@article{dd9208fe0957431c88ac528651c8e1fc,
title = "Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with subtypes that may vary in their etiologies. Menopausal hormone therapy has been associated more strongly with lobular and tubular than ductal histologic types and with tumors that are smaller, hormone receptor-positive, and of lower grade. At the same time, correlations have been observed between histology and clinical characteristics. To identify those tumor subtypes most strongly associated with hormone therapy use, it is necessary to disentangle these interrelationships. METHODS: Based on 3,464 postmenopausal breast cancer cases and 6,657 controls from the population-based Mammary carcinoma Risk factor Investigation study, we used polytomous logistic regression to evaluate associations between hormone therapy use and risk of invasive breast cancer subtypes. We assessed variations in risk for selected tumor characteristics among histologic and hormone receptor subtypes, both overall and for specific hormone therapy regimens. RESULTS: Lobular and mixed types showed less variation by prognostic factors than did ductal tumors. Current hormone therapy use had the strongest associations with prognostic variables in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive and/or progesterone receptor (PR)-positive ductal tumors and in lobular tumors regardless of ER/PR status, with little effect on ER/PR-negative ductal tumors. The observed associations varied minimally by hormone therapy type or regimen. CONCLUSION: Current hormone therapy use was associated with more favorable breast cancer characteristics for ductal tumors but had less effect on prognostic characteristics in women with lobular tumors. Both histologic type and estrogen receptor/progesterone receptor status seem to be important in explaining the role of hormone therapy in the etiology of breast cancer subtypes.",
author = "Slanger, {Tracy E} and {Chang-Claude Jenny}, C and Nadia Obi-Osius and Silke Kropp and J{\"u}rgen Berger and Eik Vettorazzi and Wilhelm Braendle and Gunter Bastert and Stefan Hentschel and Dieter Flesch-Janys",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "18",
pages = "1188--1196",
journal = "CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR",
issn = "1055-9965",
publisher = "American Association for Cancer Research Inc.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of clinical breast cancer subtypes.

AU - Slanger, Tracy E

AU - Chang-Claude Jenny, C

AU - Obi-Osius, Nadia

AU - Kropp, Silke

AU - Berger, Jürgen

AU - Vettorazzi, Eik

AU - Braendle, Wilhelm

AU - Bastert, Gunter

AU - Hentschel, Stefan

AU - Flesch-Janys, Dieter

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with subtypes that may vary in their etiologies. Menopausal hormone therapy has been associated more strongly with lobular and tubular than ductal histologic types and with tumors that are smaller, hormone receptor-positive, and of lower grade. At the same time, correlations have been observed between histology and clinical characteristics. To identify those tumor subtypes most strongly associated with hormone therapy use, it is necessary to disentangle these interrelationships. METHODS: Based on 3,464 postmenopausal breast cancer cases and 6,657 controls from the population-based Mammary carcinoma Risk factor Investigation study, we used polytomous logistic regression to evaluate associations between hormone therapy use and risk of invasive breast cancer subtypes. We assessed variations in risk for selected tumor characteristics among histologic and hormone receptor subtypes, both overall and for specific hormone therapy regimens. RESULTS: Lobular and mixed types showed less variation by prognostic factors than did ductal tumors. Current hormone therapy use had the strongest associations with prognostic variables in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive and/or progesterone receptor (PR)-positive ductal tumors and in lobular tumors regardless of ER/PR status, with little effect on ER/PR-negative ductal tumors. The observed associations varied minimally by hormone therapy type or regimen. CONCLUSION: Current hormone therapy use was associated with more favorable breast cancer characteristics for ductal tumors but had less effect on prognostic characteristics in women with lobular tumors. Both histologic type and estrogen receptor/progesterone receptor status seem to be important in explaining the role of hormone therapy in the etiology of breast cancer subtypes.

AB - BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease with subtypes that may vary in their etiologies. Menopausal hormone therapy has been associated more strongly with lobular and tubular than ductal histologic types and with tumors that are smaller, hormone receptor-positive, and of lower grade. At the same time, correlations have been observed between histology and clinical characteristics. To identify those tumor subtypes most strongly associated with hormone therapy use, it is necessary to disentangle these interrelationships. METHODS: Based on 3,464 postmenopausal breast cancer cases and 6,657 controls from the population-based Mammary carcinoma Risk factor Investigation study, we used polytomous logistic regression to evaluate associations between hormone therapy use and risk of invasive breast cancer subtypes. We assessed variations in risk for selected tumor characteristics among histologic and hormone receptor subtypes, both overall and for specific hormone therapy regimens. RESULTS: Lobular and mixed types showed less variation by prognostic factors than did ductal tumors. Current hormone therapy use had the strongest associations with prognostic variables in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive and/or progesterone receptor (PR)-positive ductal tumors and in lobular tumors regardless of ER/PR status, with little effect on ER/PR-negative ductal tumors. The observed associations varied minimally by hormone therapy type or regimen. CONCLUSION: Current hormone therapy use was associated with more favorable breast cancer characteristics for ductal tumors but had less effect on prognostic characteristics in women with lobular tumors. Both histologic type and estrogen receptor/progesterone receptor status seem to be important in explaining the role of hormone therapy in the etiology of breast cancer subtypes.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 18

SP - 1188

EP - 1196

JO - CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR

JF - CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR

SN - 1055-9965

IS - 4

M1 - 4

ER -