Abstract

BackgroundMenopausal hormone therapy (MHT) is a risk factor for breast cancer (BC). Evidence suggests that its effect on BC risk could be partly mediated by mammographic density. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between MHT, mammographic density and BC risk using data from a prospective study.MethodsWe used data from a case-control study nested within the French cohort E3N including 453 cases and 453 matched controls. Measures of mammographic density, history of MHT use during follow-up and information on potential confounders were available for all women. The association between MHT and mammographic density was evaluated by linear regression models. We applied mediation modelling techniques to estimate, under the hypothesis of a causal model, the proportion of the effect of MHT on BC risk mediated by percent mammographic density (PMD) for BC overall and by hormone receptor status.ResultsAmong MHT users, 4.2% used exclusively oestrogen alone compared with 68.3% who used exclusively oestrogens plus progestogens. Mammographic density was higher in current users (for a 60-year-old woman, mean PMD 33%; 95% CI 31 to 35%) than in past (29%; 27 to 31%) and never users (24%; 22 to 26%). No statistically significant association was observed between duration of MHT and mammographic density. In past MHT users, mammographic density was negatively associated with time since last use; values similar to those of never users were observed in women who had stopped MHT at least 8 years earlier. The odds ratio of BC for current versus never MHT users, adjusted for age, year of birth, menopausal status at baseline and BMI, was 1.67 (95% CI, 1.04 to 2.68). The proportion of effect mediated by PMD was 34% for any BC and became 48% when the correlation between BMI and PMD was accounted for. These effects were limited to hormone receptor-positive BC.ConclusionsOur results suggest that, under a causal model, nearly half of the effect of MHT on hormone receptor-positive BC risk is mediated by mammographic density, which appears to be modified by MHT for up to 8 years after MHT termination.

Highlights

  • Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) is a risk factor for breast cancer (BC)

  • Our results suggest that, under a causal model, nearly half of the effect of MHT on hormone receptor-positive BC risk is mediated by mammographic density, which appears to be modified by MHT for up to 8 years after MHT termination

  • In the linear regression analyses, to account for the over-representation of BC cases in the data set compared to the general population, cases and controls were weighted by p/2 and (1 − p)/2 respectively [17], where the probability p was set to 0.08, an estimate of the prevalence of BC cases in the general population of women aged more than 55 years

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Summary

Introduction

Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) is a risk factor for breast cancer (BC). Mammographic density, that is the dense area (DA) of the breast consisting of epithelial and stromal tissue that appears light on a mammogram—as opposed to fat tissue that appears dark (non-dense area, NDA)—is one of the strongest risk factors for breast cancer (BC) in both pre- and postmenopausal women. One of the most concerning side effects of MHT is the increased risk of hormone-related cancers, including breast (for oestrogen-progestogen MHT) and endometrial cancer (for oestrogen alone MHT) [6]. The same pooled analysis has showed an increased risk associated with either oestrogen plus progestogen and oestrogen alone, with a higher effect of the former formulation

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