نتایج جستجو برای: mammographic density

تعداد نتایج: 412308  

Journal: :Cancer prevention research 2015
Vidar G Flote Hanne Frydenberg Giske Ursin Anita Iversen Morten W Fagerland Peter T Ellison Erik A Wist Thore Egeland Tom Wilsgaard Anne McTiernan Anne-Sofie Furberg Inger Thune

High-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) may influence the proliferation of breast tumor cells, but it is unclear whether low HDL-C levels, alone or in combination with cyclic estrogen and progesterone, are associated with mammographic density, a strong predictor of breast cancer development. Fasting morning serum concentrations of HDL-C were assessed in 202 premenopausal women, 25 to 35 ye...

Journal: :Cancer research 2015
Jennifer Stone Deborah J Thompson Isabel Dos Santos Silva Christopher Scott Rulla M Tamimi Sara Lindstrom Peter Kraft Aditi Hazra Jingmei Li Louise Eriksson Kamila Czene Per Hall Matt Jensen Julie Cunningham Janet E Olson Kristen Purrington Fergus J Couch Judith Brown Jean Leyland Ruth M L Warren Robert N Luben Kay-Tee Khaw Paula Smith Nicholas J Wareham Sebastian M Jud Katharina Heusinger Matthias W Beckmann Julie A Douglas Kaanan P Shah Heang-Ping Chan Mark A Helvie Loic Le Marchand Laurence N Kolonel Christy Woolcott Gertraud Maskarinec Christopher Haiman Graham G Giles Laura Baglietto Kavitha Krishnan Melissa C Southey Carmel Apicella Irene L Andrulis Julia A Knight Giske Ursin Grethe I Grenaker Alnaes Vessela N Kristensen Anne-Lise Borresen-Dale Inger Torhild Gram Manjeet K Bolla Qin Wang Kyriaki Michailidou Joe Dennis Jacques Simard Paul Pharoah Alison M Dunning Douglas F Easton Peter A Fasching V Shane Pankratz John L Hopper Celine M Vachon

Mammographic density measures adjusted for age and body mass index (BMI) are heritable predictors of breast cancer risk, but few mammographic density-associated genetic variants have been identified. Using data for 10,727 women from two international consortia, we estimated associations between 77 common breast cancer susceptibility variants and absolute dense area, percent dense area and absol...

Journal: :American journal of epidemiology 2008
Valerie A McCormack Nicholas Perry Sarah J Vinnicombe Isabel dos Santos Silva

It is not known whether the 20-30% lower breast cancer incidence rates in first-generation South Asian and Afro-Caribbean women relative to Caucasian women in the United Kingdom are reflected in mammographic density. The authors conducted a United Kingdom population-based multiethnic study of mammographic density at ages 50-64 years in 645 women. Data on breast cancer risk factors were obtained...

Journal: :Asian Pacific journal of cancer prevention : APJCP 2013
Sadaf Alipour Leila Bayani Azin Saberi Afsaneh Alikhassi Ladan Hosseini Bita Eslami

BACKGROUND Clinicians determine degree of mammographic density based on tissue firmness on breast examination. The study aimed to compare breast density in mammography and clinical breast examination. MATERIALS AND METHODS Six-hundred sixty three women 40 years of age or older were studied. The breast exam density was graded from 1 to 4 by two expert surgeons and the mammographic parenchymal ...

Journal: :Cancer research 2014
Rosa Anna DeFilippis Colleen Fordyce Kelley Patten Hang Chang Jianxin Zhao Gerald V Fontenay Karla Kerlikowske Bahram Parvin Thea D Tlsty

Telomere malfunction and other types of DNA damage induce an activin A-dependent stress response in mortal nontumorigenic human mammary epithelial cells that subsequently induces desmoplastic-like phenotypes in neighboring fibroblasts. Some characteristics of this fibroblast/stromal response, such as reduced adipocytes and increased extracellular matrix content, are observed not only in tumor t...

2015
Charmaine Pei Ling Lee Hyungwon Choi Khee Chee Soo Min-Han Tan Wen Yee Chay Kee Seng Chia Jenny Liu Jingmei Li Mikael Hartman Chunyan He

INTRODUCTION Known prediction models for breast cancer can potentially by improved by the addition of mammographic density and common genetic variants identified in genome-wide associations studies known to be associated with risk of the disease. We evaluated the benefit of including mammographic density and the cumulative effect of genetic variants in breast cancer risk prediction among women ...

Journal: :American journal of epidemiology 2014
Christy G Woolcott Shannon M Conroy Chisato Nagata Giske Ursin Celine M Vachon Martin J Yaffe Ian S Pagano Celia Byrne Gertraud Maskarinec

To maximize statistical power in studies of mammographic density and breast cancer, it is advantageous to combine data from several studies, but standardization of the density assessment is desirable. Using data from 4 case-control studies, we describe the process of reassessment and the resulting correlation between values, identify predictors of differences in density readings, and evaluate t...

2013
Xuezheng Sun Gretchen L. Gierach Rupninder Sandhu Tyisha Williams Bentley R. Midkiff Jolanta Lissowska Ewa Wesolowska Norman F. Boyd Nicole B. Johnson Jonine D. Figueroa Mark E. Sherman Melissa A. Troester

Purpose: Previous studies of breast tissue gene expression have shown that the extratumoral microenvironment has substantial variability across individuals, some of which can be attributed to epidemiologic factors. To evaluate how mammographic density and breast tissue composition relate to extratumoral microenvironment gene expression, we used data on 121 patients with breast cancer from the p...

2010
Gertraud Maskarinec Martijn Verheus Jeffrey A. Tice

Isoflavones, phytoestrogens in soy beans with estrogen-like properties, have been examined for their cancer protective effects. Mammographic density is a strong predictor of breast cancer. This review summarizes studies that have examined the association between isoflavones and breast density. Observational investigations in Hawaii and Singapore suggest slightly lower breast density among women...

Journal: :Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology 2005
Gillian S Dite John D Wark Graham G Giles Dallas R English Margaret R E McCredie John L Hopper

Mammographic density and bone mineral density, risk factors for breast cancer and osteoporotic fractures, respectively, are both thought to reflect cumulative exposure to estrogen and are highly heritable. We asked if there was overlap between the genes that explain their variances. We studied 63 monozygous and 71 dizygous female twin pairs ages 38 to 71 years (mean, 50 years). Absolute and per...

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