Abstract
Accumulating evidence suggests that the aggregation of common metabolic conditions (high blood pressure, diabetes, dyslipidemia) is a risk factor for breast cancer. Breast cancer incidence has risen steadily in Asian American women, and whether these metabolic conditions contribute to breast cancer risk in certain Asian American subgroups is unknown. We investigated the role of physician-diagnosed hypertension, high cholesterol, and diabetes separately, and in combination, in relation to the risk of breast cancer in a population-based case-control study of 2,167 Asian Americans diagnosed with breast cancer and 2,035 age and ethnicity matched control women in Los Angeles County. Compared to Asian American women who did not have any of the metabolic conditions, those with 1, 2, or 3 conditions showed a steady increase in risk (respective odds ratios (ORs) were 1.12, 1.42, 1.62; P trend=0.001) with adjustment for covariates including body mass index. Similar significant trends were observed in Filipina Americans (P trend=0.021), postmenopausal women (P trend =0.001), Asian women who were born in the United States (US) (P trend =0.032) and migrants who have lived in the US for at least 20 years (P trend=0.008), but not migrants who lived in the US for <20 years (P trend=0.62). These results suggest that westernization in lifestyle (diet, physical inactivity) and corresponding increase in adiposity have contributed to the rising prevalence of these metabolic conditions, which in turn, are associated with an increase in breast cancer. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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