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Active Cigarette Smoking, Variants in Carcinogen Metabolism Genes and Breast Cancer Risk among Pre‐ and Postmenopausal Women in O ntario, C anada
Author(s) -
Cotterchio Michelle,
Mirea Lucia,
Ozcelik Hilmi,
Kreiger Nancy
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the breast journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.533
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1524-4741
pISSN - 1075-122X
DOI - 10.1111/tbj.12304
Subject(s) - medicine , breast cancer , odds ratio , oncology , confidence interval , cancer , population , risk factors for breast cancer , carcinogen , gynecology , environmental health , genetics , biology
Cigarette smoking is strongly associated with various diseases including many cancers; however, evidence regarding breast cancer risk remains inconclusive with some studies reporting no association, and others an increased risk with long duration and early initiation of smoking. Genetic variation in carcinogen‐metabolizing enzymes may modify these associations. Breast cancer cases were identified from the O ntario C ancer R egistry ( OCR ) during 2003–2004 and population controls through random digit dialing methods. All subjects completed self‐administered questionnaires. Subsequently, saliva samples were obtained from cases ( N  = 1,776) and controls ( N  = 1,839) for deoxyribonucleic acid ( DNA ) extraction. Multivariate logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratio ( OR ) and 95% confidence intervals ( CI ) for active smoking variables, and interactions were assessed between smoking and 36 carcinogen‐metabolizing candidate gene variants. No statistically significant association was found between active smoking and breast cancer risk among all women nor when stratified by menopausal status; however, nonsignificant increased premenopausal breast cancer risk was observed among current smokers and women smoking before first pregnancy. Several statistically significant interactions were observed between smoking and genetic variants ( CYP 1A2 1548C>T, CYP 1A1 3801T>C, CYP 1B1 4326G>C, NAT 1 c.‐85‐1014T>A, UGT 1A7 W208R 622T>C, SOD 2 c.47T>C, GSTT 1 deletion). However, in analyses stratified by these genotypes, smoking OR s had wide confidence intervals (and with few exceptions included 1.0) making interpretations difficult. Active smoking was not associated with breast cancer risk, although several significant interactions were observed between smoking, carcinogen‐metabolizing genetic variants, and breast cancer risk.

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