Abstract

Breast cancer incidence rates are low but rising in urban Mongolia. We collected reproductive and lifestyle factor information and measured anthropometrics and serum sex steroid concentrations among 314 premenopausal women living in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Mean differences in hormone concentrations by these factors were calculated using age-adjusted quadratic regression splines. Estrone and estradiol in college-educated women were, respectively, 18.2% (p = 0.03) and 23.6% (p = 0.03) lower than in high-school-educated women. Progesterone concentrations appeared 55.8% lower (p = 0.10) in women residing in modern housing compared with women living in traditional housing (gers), although this finding was not statistically significant. Testosterone concentrations were positively associated with adiposity and central fat distribution; 17.1% difference (p = 0.001) for highest vs. lowest quarter for body mass index and 15.1% difference (p = 0.005) for waist-to-height ratio. Estrogens were higher in the follicular phase of women who breastfed each child for shorter durations. A distinct hormonal profile was associated with an urban lifestyle in premenopausal, Mongol women. In particular, heavier, more-educated women living in urban dwellings had higher testosterone and lower estrogen and progesterone levels. Higher breast cancer incidence in urban compared with rural women suggest that the hormonal profile associated with a more traditional lifestyle may be protective among Mongol women.

Highlights

  • The near six-fold difference in breast cancer incidence worldwide, with some of the highest rates in western Europe and some of the lowest in eastern Asia [1], continues to be a rich area for investigation of underlying biological mechanisms in breast carcinogenesis

  • The present study demonstrates that Mongol women with a more urban lifestyle had lower premenopausal estrogen and progesterone, and higher testosterone concentrations than Mongol women with a more traditional lifestyle

  • Our results suggest that within Mongolia, women with an urban lifestyle have higher androgen concentrations and lower estrogens and progesterone than women with a more traditional lifestyle

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Summary

Introduction

The near six-fold difference in breast cancer incidence worldwide, with some of the highest rates in western Europe and some of the lowest in eastern Asia [1], continues to be a rich area for investigation of underlying biological mechanisms in breast carcinogenesis. Public Health 2016, 13, 1066; doi:10.3390/ijerph13111066 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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