Abstract

Conflicting results have appeared in the literature on whether the amount of non-dense, adipose tissue in the breast is a risk factor or a protective factor for breast cancer, and biological hypotheses supporting both have been proposed. We suggest here that limitations in study design and statistical methodology could potentially explain the inconsistent results. Specifically, we exploit recent advances in methodology and software developed for the joint analysis of multiple longitudinal outcomes and time-to-event data to jointly analyze dense and non-dense tissue trajectories and the risk of breast cancer in a large, Swedish, screening cohort. We also perform extensive sensitivity analyses by mimicking analyses/designs of previously published studies, e.g. ignoring available longitudinal data. Overall, we did not find strong evidence supporting an association between non-dense tissue and the risk of incident breast cancer. We hypothesize that (1) previous studies have not been able to isolate the effect of non-dense tissue from dense tissue or adipose tissue elsewhere in the body, that (2) estimates of the effect of non-dense tissue on risk are strongly sensitive to modeling assumptions, or that (3) the effect size of non-dense tissue on breast cancer risk is likely to be small/not clinically relevant.

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