Cancer incidence was studied in 10,552 patients (mean age, 57 years) who received 131I therapy (mean dose, 506 MBq) for hyperthyroidism between 1950 and 1975. Follow-up on these patients was continued for an average of 15 years. Record linkage with the Swedish Cancer Register for the period 1958-1985 identified 1543 cancers occurring 1 year or more after 131I treatment, and the standardized incidence ratio (SIR) was 1.06 (95% confidence interval = 1.01-1.11). Significantly increased SIRs were observed for cancers of the lung (SIR = 1.32; n = 105) and kidney (SIR = 1.39; n = 66). Among 10-year survivors, significantly elevated risks were seen for cancers of the stomach (SIR = 1.33; n = 58), kidney (SIR = 1.51; n = 37), and brain (SIR = 1.63; n = 30). Only the risk for stomach cancer, however, increased over time (P less than .05) and with increasing activity administered (P = not significant). The risk for malignant lymphoma was significantly below expectation (SIR = 0.53; n = 11). Overall cancer risk did not increase with administered 131I dose or with time since exposure. The absence of any increase in leukemia adds further support to the view that a radiation dose delivered gradually over time is less carcinogenic than the same total dose received over a short time. Only for stomach cancer was a possible radiogenic excess suggested.
The relation between breast cancer risk and serum levels of cholesterol and beta-lipoprotein (BLP), height, weight, Quetelet's index and blood pressure was studied in a cohort of 46,570 Swedish women less than 75 years of age. The cohort was examined between 1963 and 1965 and followed up in the Swedish Cancer Registry until 1983. During this period 1,182 cases of breast cancer were reported. Of those, 196 were reported among women less than 50 years of age. Statistically significant positive associations were observed between height, weight, and systolic blood pressure and breast cancer risk. No clear trend in cancer risk related to serum cholesterol or BLP was seen in the total material. In a stepwise Cox multiple regression analysis only the associations with height and blood pressure remained significant. Among women, having their cancer diagnosed before the age of 50, higher Quetelet's index was associated with a lower cancer risk, whereas a positive correlation was seen among women greater than or equal to 50 years. In the group of younger women a high BLP level was associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. This relation became even stronger when studied in a multivariate analysis, which also showed a negative correlation between serum cholesterol and cancer risk.
Exposure to ionizing radiation is a known risk factor for breast cancer and the fertility pattern is a recognized modifier of breast cancer risk. The aim of this study was to elucidate the interaction between these 2 factors. This study is based on a Swedish cohort of 17 202 women who had been irradiated for skin haemangiomas in infancy between 1920 and 1965. The mean age at treatment was 6 months and the median breast dose was 0.05 Gy (range 0–35.8 Gy). Follow-up information on vital status, parity, age at first childbirth and breast cancer incidence was retrieved through record linkage with national population registers for the period 1958–1995. Analyses of excess relative risk (ERR) models were performed using Poisson regression methods. In this cohort, the fertility pattern differed from that in the Swedish population, with significantly fewer childbirths overall and before 25 years of age but more childbirth after that age. There were 307 breast cancers in the cohort and the standardized incidence ratio (SIR) was 1.22 (95% CI 1.09–1.36). A linear dose–response model with stratification for fertility pattern and menopausal status resulted in the best fit of the data. ERR/Gy was 0.33 (95% CI 0.17–0.53). In absolute terms this means an excess of 2.1 and 5.4 cases per Gy per 104breast-years in the age groups 40–49 and 50–59 years respectively. The fertility pattern influenced the breast cancer risk in this irradiated population in a similar way to that observed in other studies. SIR at dose = 0 was highest, 2.31, among postmenopausal nulliparous women (95% CI 1.48–3.40, n = 62). SIR at dose = 0 was lowest in pre- or postmenopausal women with a first childbirth before 25 years of age; 0.89 (0.71–1.09) and 0.88 (0.58–1.25) respectively. Thus, in addition to the dose–effect response in the cohort, part of the breast cancer excess could be explained by a different fertility pattern. The estimates of ERR/Gy for the various categories of age at first childbirth, number of children, menopausal status and ovarian dose were very similar, contradicting any interaction effects on the scale of relative risk. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.com
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