Rating the Risk Factors for Breast Cancer : Annals of Surgery

Journal Logo

REVIEW

Rating the Risk Factors for Breast Cancer

Singletary, S. Eva MD, FACS

Author Information
Annals of Surgery 237(4):p 474-482, April 2003. | DOI: 10.1097/01.SLA.0000059969.64262.87

Abstract

Objective 

To update and summarize evidence of risk factors for breast cancer.

Summary Background Data 

Women who are at high risk for breast cancer have a variety of options available to them, including watchful waiting, prophylactic surgery, and chemoprevention. It is increasingly important to accurately assess a patient’s risk profile to ensure that the cost/benefit ratio of the selected treatment is favorable.

Methods 

Estimates of relative risk for documented risk factors were obtained from seminal papers identified in previous reviews. These estimates were updated where appropriate with data from more recent reports using large sample sizes or presenting meta-analyses of previous studies. These reports were identified from a review of the Medline database from 1992 to 2002.

Results 

Risk factors that have received a great deal of publicity (hormone use, alcohol consumption, obesity, nulliparity) present a relatively modest relative risk for breast cancer (<2). Factors associated with a prior history of neoplastic disease or atypical hyperplasia and factors associated with a genetic predisposition significantly affect the risk of breast cancer, with relative risks ranging from 3 (for some cases of positive family history) to 200 (for premenopausal women positive for a BRCA mutation).

Conclusions 

More precise tools, based on techniques of molecular biology such as microarray analysis, will be needed to assess individual risk for breast cancer.

© 2003 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

You can read the full text of this article if you:

Access through Ovid