Alcohol intake and invasive breast cancer risk by molecular subtype and race in the Carolina Breast Cancer Study
PURPOSE: Alcohol is an established breast cancer risk factor, but there is little evidence on whether the association differs between African Americans and whites.
METHODS: Invasive breast cancers (n = 1,795; 1,014 white, 781 African American) and age- and race-matched controls (n = 1,558; 844 white, 714 African American) from the Carolina Breast Cancer Study (Phases I-II) were used to estimate odds ratios (ORs) and 95 % confidence interval (CI) for pre-diagnosis drinks per week and breast cancer risk.
RESULTS: African American controls reported lower alcohol intake than white controls across all age groups. Light drinking (0 to 7 drinks per week had an elevated risk compared to light drinkers [adjusted OR, 95% CI 1.62 (1.03-2.54)]. A weaker association was observed among whites [adjusted OR, 95% CI 1.20 (0.87-1.67)]. The association of >7 drinks per week with estrogen receptor-negative [adjusted OR, 95% CI 2.17 (1.25-3.75)] and triple-negative [adjusted OR, 95% CI 2.12 (1.12-4.04)] breast cancers was significant for African American, but not white women. We observed significantly elevated ORs for heavy intake at ages 50 years of age for African American women only. We found no evidence of statistical interaction between alcohol intake and oral contraceptive use or smoking.
CONCLUSIONS: Drinking more than seven alcoholic beverages per week increased invasive breast cancer risk among white and African American women, with significant increases only among African American women. Genetic or environmental factors that differ by race may mediate the alcohol-breast cancer risk association.
Additional Info
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Authors
Williams L.A.; Olshan A.F.; Tse C.K.; Bell M.E.; Troester M.A. -
Issue
Cancer Causes Control / pages 259-269 / volume 27 -
Published Date
february 2016
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