Age at menarche is one of the few established risk factors for breast cancer; identification of its exogenous determinants could throw light on the origins of breast cancer. We have undertaken an epidemiologic study in Greece to ascertain whether: I ) energy intake, an indicator of physical activity
Age at menarche, probability of ovulation and breast cancer risk
✍ Scribed by Brian Macmahon; Dimitrios Trichopoulos; James Brown; A. P. Andersen; Kunio Aoki; Philip Cole; Frits Dewaard; Tapani Kauraniemi; Robert W. Morgan; Maret Purde; Božena Ravnihar; Nils Stormby; Knut Westlund; Ngai-Chen Woo
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 368 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
An analysis is undertaken of the frequency of ovulation in 17 groups of women aged 15 to 19 who had been the subjects of other studies. A urine specimen of at least 8 h accumulation had been provided on the 20th or 21st day of a menstrual cycle by 681 women. Analysis is restricted to 431 specimens which had been collected between 11 and 3 days prior to the onset of the subsequent menstrual period. A pregnanediol concentration of less than 1 mg per litre in such a specimen was taken as evidence that the cycle was anovular. The probability of a cycle being anovular was inversely and significantly related to the number of years since menarche, and, with years since menarche held constant, was positively but not significiantly associated with age at menarche. This observation indicates that women with early menarche do not have a longer duration of exposure to anovular cycles than do those whose menarche is delayed, and that variation in the duration of exposure to post‐menarcheal anovular cycles does not explain the association of breast cancer risk with early age at menarche. The 17 groups of women were classified into four categories according to ethnic origin and breast cancer incidence in the populations from which they derived. Anovular cycles were not more common in the high‐risk groups; indeed, the two centers in the lowest risk category had the highest proportion of anovular cycles.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This paper reviews previously published models of the effect of parity and age at any birth on breast cancer risk. It is shown that these models are conceptually similar and can be written within a general model. Various restrictions on the parameters of the general model yield the specific models.
## Abstract In an effort to assess the relative importance of age at first birth, age at subsequent births, and total parity to the occurrence of breast cancer, reproductive data from 4,225 women with breast cancer and 12,307 hospitalized women without breast cancer were analyzed by a multiple logi