Although female breast cancer rates are lower in China than in Western countries, rates have been rising rapidly in China. This increase may be due to changes in established breast cancer risk factors, but it is possible that exposure to occupational and environmental carcinogens in Shanghai also ha
Risk factors for breast cancer among Filipino women in Manila
✍ Scribed by Lorna J. Gibson; Clarisse Héry; Nicolas Mitton; Abigail Gines-Bautista; D Maxwell Parkin; Corazon Ngelangel; Paola Pisani
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 124 KB
- Volume
- 126
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Age‐adjusted incidence rates of breast cancer vary greatly worldwide with highest rates found in the typically ‘westernised’ countries of North America and Europe. Much lower rates are observed in Asian and African populations but an exception to this has been reported for the Manila Cancer Registry in the Philippines. The reason for this high rate is unknown but may be associated with the change in lifestyle that has occurred in urban Manila since the 1960s. In 1995, a randomised controlled trial was set up in Manila to evaluate the feasibility of a screening intervention by clinical breast examination as an alternative to mammography. The cohort of 151,168 women was followed‐up to 2001 for cancer incidence and a nested case‐control study carried out. This aimed to evaluate the increase in breast cancer risk associated with known risk factors. Increased risks were seen for a high level of education (OR = 1.9 95%CI 1.1–3.3 for education stopped at ≥13 versus <13 years), nulliparity (OR = 5.0 95% CI 2.5–10.0 for nulliparity versus five or more children), and late age at first birth (OR = 3.3 95% CI 1.3–8.3 for age ≥30 versus <20 years). We found no association with excess body weight, height, use of exogenous hormones or alcohol consumption. From this study, the recognised “classical” risk factors do not fully explain the high breast cancer incidence in Metro Manila, especially when compared to other urban Asian populations. We conclude that it is too simplistic to ascribe the high risk to ‘westernisation’.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Age standardized incidence rates of breast cancer in developed countries is nearly threefold higher than in developing countries. Iran has had one of the lowest incidence rates for breast cancer in the world, but during the last four decades increasing incidence rates of breast cancer m
There are few unequivocably established environmental carcinogens for breast cancer in women. Nevertheless, environmental factors are believed to explain much of the international variation in breast cancer risk and possibly differences among racial/ethnic groups. Along with lifestyle, some adverse
## Abstract Although several risk factors are common to endometriosis and breast cancer, the results of observational studies of an association have so far been inconsistent. We evaluated the relationship between endometriosis and breast cancer on the basis of data on selected cancers and medical h
To evaluate risk factors for lung cancer in nonsmoking women, we used data of a case-control study conducted between 1991 and 1996 in Germany. A total of 234 female histologically confirmed lung cancer patients and 535 population controls who had never smoked more than 400 cigarettes in their lifeti
A self-administered questionnaire was completed by 497 Chinese women in Beijing with histologically confirmed breast cancer and by an equal number of age-and neighborhoodmatched control women. High body weight (71 + kg) was a risk factor for breast cancer in women aged 50 + (RR = I .90), but this ef