Abstract

BackgroundClinical breast cancer subtypes are categorized basing on the expression of hormone receptors and overexpression of the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). It is still unclear whether parity impact the risk of different breast cancer subtypes. MethodsWe searched eight mainstream databases for published epidemiologic studies that assessed the relationship between parity and risk of breast cancer subtypes up to January 12, 2021. Parity number were unified into nulliparity and ever parity. The random-effects or fixed-effect models were used to calculate the pooled odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) among different subtypes. Restricted cubic spline analysis with four knots was applied to determine the relationship of parity number and risk of breast cancer subtypes. ResultsWe pooled sixteen case-control and four cohort studies, and performed an analysis including 7795 luminal A, 3576 luminal B, 1794 HER2-overexpressing, and 5192 triple-negative breast cancer cases among 1135131 participants. The combined ORs for ever parity versus nulliparity indicated a 34% reduction in luminal A risk (OR=0.66, 95% CI: 0.56–0.78), and a 29% reduction in luminal B risk (OR=0.71, 95% CI: 0.63–0.81), there was no significant association in HER2-overexpressing or TNBC risk. In the dose-response analysis, we observed a potentially non-linear and gradually increasing protective relationship between the number of parity and luminal breast cancer risk. ConclusionsThe effect of parity on breast cancer seems to vary among breast tumor subtypes, and it plays a protective role in luminal breast cancer.

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