Abstract

Abstract African American (AA) women have higher mortality rates from breast cancer (BrCa) and are diagnosed at younger ages than their Caucasian counterparts. Women who have had a benign breast biopsy are at increased risk of the disease, although less is known about the risk of BrCa associated with benign breast disease in AA women. We examined 1428 breast biopsies from AA women which occurred from 1997–2000 and assessed various pathologic markers including: apocrine metaplasia, ductal hyperplasia including atypia, evidence of cysts, duct ectasia, fibrosis, intra-ductal papilloma, sclerosing adenosis, columnar alteration, and involution (atrophy). These women were followed for later BrCa through the Metropolitan Detroit Cancer Surveillance System, part of the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program through 2008. Women who developed BrCa were compared to those in the cohort who did not, and to other AA women with BrCa in the SEER registry. AA women in our study were also compared to Caucasian women in the Mayo Clinic cohort. Differences in variables were assessed by chi-squared tests and 95% confidence intervals. Of the 1428 biopsies, 52 (3.6%) subsequent incident breast cancers were reported in SEER. The mean age at diagnosis was 59, and the mean time from biopsy to BrCa diagnosis was 6.1 years. Individuals with atypical ductal hyperplasia at biopsy (n=37, 2.6%) were more likely to develop breast cancer (n=7, 13.5%, p<0.01). No other pathologic variables were associated with increased risk. Women in our cohort with breast cancer did not differ from AA in the SEER database with respect to age at diagnosis, stage at diagnosis, or receptor positivity. Compared to the Caucasian women in the Mayo Clinic BBD cohort, AA women in our study were younger at biopsy (p<0.01), but had similar percentages of involution and atypia (p=0.50 and 0.15, respectively). Our preliminary findings among a relatively small group of AA women with prior benign breast biopsies and incident breast cancers suggest that results from the Mayo Cohort study are likely to apply to AA populations. Citation Information: Cancer Res 2011;71(24 Suppl):Abstract nr P1-08-16.

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