Scientific publications
Body shape trajectories and risk of breast cancer: results from the SUN ('Seguimiento Universidad De Navarra') Project. Scientific Publication
Rodrigo Sanchez-Bayona 1 2 , Carmen Sayon-Orea 1 , Itziar Gardeazabal 1 3 , Javier Llorca 4 5 , Alfredo Gea 1 6 7 , Marta Santisteban 7 8 , Jose M Martín-Moreno 9 , Estefania Toledo 1 6 7
Objective: The aim of this study was to assess body shape trajectories in childhood and midlife in relation to subsequent risk of breast cancer (BC) in a Mediterranean cohort.
Design: The 'Seguimiento Universidad de Navarra' (SUN) Project is a dynamic prospective cohort study of university graduates initiated in 1999. With a group-based modelling approach, we assessed body shape trajectories from age 5 to 40 years. Multivariable Cox regression models were used to estimate the hazard ratio (HR) for BC after the age of 40 years according to the body shape trajectory.
Setting: City of Pamplona, in the North of Spain.
Participants: 6498 women with a mean age of 40 years (sd 9).
Results: We identified four distinct body shape trajectories ('childhood lean-midlife increase' (19·9 %), 'childhood medium-midlife stable' (53 %), 'childhood heavy-midlife stable' (21 %) and 'childhood heavy-midlife increase' (6·1 %)).
Among 54 978 women-years of follow-up, we confirmed eighty-two incident cases of BC. Women in the 'childhood lean-midlife increase' group showed a higher risk of BC (HR = 1·84, 95 % CI 1·11, 3·04) compared with women in the 'childhood medium-midlife stable' category. This association was stronger for postmenopausal BC (HR = 2·42, 95 % CI 1·07, 5·48).
Conclusions: Our results suggest a role for lifetime adiposity in breast carcinogenesis.
CITATION Public Health Nutr. 2021 Feb;24(3):467-475. doi: 10.1017/S1368980020004322.