Summary Serum oestrone (El), oestradiol (E2) and sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels were studied in postmenopausal Japanese women in Japan (n = 91) and postmenopausal American white women (n = 38). The Japanese women were deliberately chosen to be from a rural agricultural area in order to get samples which represent as closely as possible the traditional Japanese 'lifestyle' that gave rise to the low rates of breast cancer in Japan. El levels were 47%, and E2 levels 36%, greater in the American women; these differences were only reduced to 43% and 27% after adjustment for the lower weight of the Japanese. These results were all statistically highly significant. There was little difference in SHBG levels between the Japanese and the American women. These results for El and E2 could be an important part of the explanation why Japanese and American breast cancer rates continue to diverge further after the menopause.There is considerable evidence that oestrogens are involved in the aetiology of breast cancer and that increased blood levels of oestrogen in postmenopausal breast cancer patients are one marker of high risk (Key & Pike, 1988;Bernstein et al., 1990). The incidence rates for breast cancer in Japan are substantially lower than those in the USA and European countries (Muir et al., 1987), and some systematic pathological and clinical differences between breast cancer diagnosed in Japan and western countries have been reported (Wynder et al., 1963;Chabon et al., 1974). These observations suggest that there may be important differences in endocrine function among residents in these areas, but there are surprisingly few data on blood hormone levels in healthy populations from these countries. We report here a study comparing serum oestrogen and sex-hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) levels of post-menopausal Japanese women in Japan to those of white women in the USA.
Subjects and methodsThe Japanese subjects were volunteers residing in rural areas of Miyagi, a prefecture in north-east Japan. These women were mainly from rice farming families. We first contacted them at a general medical screening clinic for the healthy elderly sponsored by their farmer's union, informing them of the purpose of our study and asking for their cooperation. The subjects in the USA were American non-Latino volunteers from a retirement community in Southern California, who had a blood sample drawn during a well-patient visit to a local health clinic. All women had to have intact ovaries, be postmenopausal, and be 60 to 70 years of age. Ninety-one women were sampled in Japan; 38 women were sampled in California. Women with any past or present endocrine disease, or who had used steroid hormones during the previous 12 months, or had more than 12 months total use of steroid hormones, were excluded.All subjects were asked to provide information on a series of factors related to breast cancer risk and, possibly, to hormonal status, including ages at menarche, menopause, and first full-term pregnancy, number of children, and present h...