Early life events and conditions and breast cancer risk: From epidemiology to etiology
- 26 November 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 122 (3) , 481-485
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.23303
Abstract
Risk factors for breast cancer—documented by intensive epidemiological investigations and viewed in the context of general principles of carcinogenesis—can be integrated to an etiologic model comprising 3 principal components: the likelihood of breast cancer occurrence depends on the number of mammary tissue‐specific stem cells, which is determined in early life; all growth‐enhancing mammotropic hormones affect the rate of expansion of initiated clones; and while a pregnancy stimulates the replication of already initiated cells, it conveys long‐term protection through differentiation of mammary tissue‐specific stem cells. This perspective accommodates much of what is known about the epidemiology and natural history of breast cancer and highlights the role of early life in the origin of this cancer.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- A genome-wide association study identifies alleles in FGFR2 associated with risk of sporadic postmenopausal breast cancerNature Genetics, 2007
- Correlation of umbilical cord blood hormones and growth factors with stem cell potential: implications for the prenatal origin of breast cancer hypothesisBreast Cancer Research, 2007
- Mammographic Density and the Risk and Detection of Breast CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 2007
- Serum Sex Steroids in Premenopausal Women and Breast Cancer Risk Within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2005
- Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I, IGF binding protein-3, and cancer risk: systematic review and meta-regression analysisPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Breast cancer and hormonal contraceptives: collaborative reanalysis of individual data on 53 297 women with breast cancer and 100 239 women without breast cancer from 54 epidemiological studiesPublished by Elsevier ,1996
- Epidemiologic correlates of breast cancer laterality (Sweden)Cancer Causes & Control, 1994
- Transient Increase in the Risk of Breast Cancer after Giving BirthNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- The Risk of Breast Cancer after Estrogen and Estrogen–Progestin ReplacementNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- ŒSTROGEN FRACTIONS DURING EARLY REPRODUCTIVE LIFE IN THE ÆTIOLOGY OF BREAST CANCERThe Lancet, 1969