1983
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.2910310604
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Age at any birth and breast cancer risk

Abstract: In an effort to assess the relative importance of age at first birth, age at subsequent births, and total parity to the occurrence of breast cancer, reproductive data from 4,225 women with breast cancer and 12,307 hospitalized women without breast cancer were analyzed by a multiple logistic regression model. Age at first birth was confirmed to be the most important reproductive risk indicator; it was associated with a 3.5% increase of relative risk for every year of increase in age at first birth (the 95% conf… Show more

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Cited by 207 publications
(128 citation statements)
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“…The estimated increase in the odds of breast cancer associated with age at delivery of the first child of 4.4%/year is comparable to estimates reported by Trichopoulos et al (1983) (3.5%) and Decarli et al (1996) (4.7%). Age at subsequent deliveries was associated with a 1% increase in risk for every 1 year increase of age at any birth.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The estimated increase in the odds of breast cancer associated with age at delivery of the first child of 4.4%/year is comparable to estimates reported by Trichopoulos et al (1983) (3.5%) and Decarli et al (1996) (4.7%). Age at subsequent deliveries was associated with a 1% increase in risk for every 1 year increase of age at any birth.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…The dotted curve corresponds to nulli-parous women. Trichopoulos et al (1983) published a model for estimating the effects of age at any birth on breast cancer risk. The age at diagnosis for cases and age at interview for controls is denoted by t. We let t i represent the age at the time of the ith birth, and assume that there are s births.…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For total fat, we fitted a model including education categories: 0 -10, 11 -13, 413 years þ BMI categories: o25, 25 -29.9, X30 kg/m 2 þ Parity: 0, 1, 2, 3, X4 þ Age at menarche, years þ use of OC: never, former and current þ Age at first birth, years (Trichopoulos et al, 1983) þ breast cancer in first-degree relative: yes or no þ alcohol intake, in g/day þ non-alcohol energy intake, in kJ/day. Total fat (10 g/day) was then added to the model, alternatively, as: (1) a continuous covariate, (2) in quintiles of total fat and (3) through splines.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women who are younger than 24 years old at the time of their first full-term pregnancy are protected against developing breast cancer much later in life, while women over the age of 35 are ultimately at an increased risk [88,89]. However, immediately following the first full-term birth, women are at an increased risk of developing breast cancer [90], which in younger women lasts around 10 years, but in older women lasts longer [91].…”
Section: Pregnancy Breast Cancer and Mascsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Again, if MaSCs are the targets for transformation, this could help explain the lower breast cancer rates in women having undergone a full-term pregnancy. Notably, this effect dissipates with increased age at the time of first pregnancy [88,104], and in the mouse model pregnancy in older mice did not result in decreased MaSC numbers [43]. However, unlike the tumors that form shortly after pregnancy, the protective effect long after pregnancy is against ER/PR(+) tumors, suggesting that in such cases mutations that occur in MaSCs may not directly lead to transformation, but could lead to tumor formation upon further oncogenic challenges in downstream progenitors ( Figure 2C).…”
Section: Pregnancy Breast Cancer and Mascsmentioning
confidence: 99%