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Overweight in relation to tumour size and axillary lymph node involvement in postmenopausal breast cancer patients-differences between women invited to vs. not invited to mammography in a randomized screening trial.

Author

Summary, in English

OBJECTIVES: Overweight is associated with advanced stage at diagnosis in breast cancer patients. This could be explained by specific tumour characteristics or tumour promoting factors in the obese, but a diagnostic delay could also be of importance. Mammographic screening has caused a change towards diagnosis of less advanced tumours. This study investigates invitation to mammographic screening and the association between overweight and tumour size/axillary lymph node involvement at breast cancer diagnosis in postmenopausal women. METHODS: In 1976 a randomized mammographic screening trial, inviting 50% of all women aged 45-69 was set up in Malmö, Sweden. The present analysis examined overweight (body mass index >or=25) as a determinant for large tumours (>20mm) and axillary lymph node involvement in postmenopausal women. These associations were studied separately in patients diagnosed prior to the mammographic screening trial, in invited women and in non-invited subjects (controls). In all, 2478 postmenopausal women were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in these groups between 1961 and 1991. Logistic regression analysis allowed adjustment for other potential determinants of tumours size and axillary lymph node involvement. RESULTS: In women diagnosed before the onset of the screening trial and in women not invited to mammography in the trial (controls), overweight was positively associated with large tumour size and axillary node involvement. There was no statistically significant association between overweight and these factors in women invited to mammographic screening. CONCLUSION: Invitation to mammographic screening may be particularly important for overweight postmenopausal women in order to detect breast tumours early.

Publishing year

2009

Language

English

Pages

41532-41532

Publication/Series

Cancer Epidemiology

Volume

33

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Cancer and Oncology

Status

Published

Research group

  • Surgery
  • Cardiovascular Research - Epidemiology

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1877-7821