Breast cancer rate after oophorectomy: A Prospective Danish Cohort Study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Fulltext

    Accepted author manuscript, 376 KB, PDF document

  • Trine Koch
  • Jeanette Therming Jørgensen
  • Jane Christensen
  • Christian Dehlendorff
  • Lærke Priskorn
  • Mette K. Simonsen
  • Anne Katrine Duun-Henriksen
  • Andersen, Zorana Jovanovic
  • Juul, Anders
  • Elvira V. Bräuner
  • Martha Hickey

The association between oophorectomy and risk of breast cancer in the general population is uncertain. The aim of our study was to determine the breast cancer rate in women from the general population after oophorectomy (performed before/after menopause), and whether this varies by use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT), hysterectomy, body mass index (BMI) and shift work. The study included 24 409 female nurses (aged ≥45 years) participating in the Danish Nurse Cohort. Nurses were followed from cohort entry until date of breast cancer, death, emigration or end of follow-up at 31 December 2018, whichever came first. Poisson regression with log-transformed person-years as the offset examined the association between oophorectomy and breast cancer (all ages and stratified by menopausal status at time of oophorectomy). The potential modifying effect of HRT use, hysterectomy, BMI and shift work on the associations was estimated. During 502 463 person-years of follow-up, 1975 (8.1%) nurses were diagnosed with breast cancer. Bilateral oophorectomy was associated with a reduced breast cancer rate compared to nurses with preserved ovaries, adjusted rate ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.79 (0.64; 0.99). Similar associations (magnitude and direction) were detected for unilateral oophorectomy and when stratifying according to menopausal status at time of oophorectomy, but without statistical significance. Unilateral and bilateral oophorectomy is associated with a reduced breast cancer rate in women from the general population. This association is not modified by use of HRT, hysterectomy, BMI or shift work.

Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Cancer
Volume149
Issue number3
Pages (from-to) 585-593
Number of pages9
ISSN0020-7136
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

    Research areas

  • breast cancer, hormone replacement therapy, hysterectomy, oophorectomy, rate

ID: 260504314