4.6 Article

Pre-Menopausal Breast Fat Density Might Predict MACE During 10 Years of Follow-Up The BRECARD Study

Journal

JACC-CARDIOVASCULAR IMAGING
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 426-438

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2020.08.028

Keywords

breast density; major adverse cardiac events; pre-menopausal status

Funding

  1. Ricerca Ateneo fund for Outcomes Research in Cardiovascular Diseases

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This study found that pre-menopausal women with higher levels of adipose tissue in breast gland (lowest breast density, category A) had higher rates of MACES. Further clinical trials are needed to translate these results into clinical practice.
OBJECTIVES This study sought to determine whether the breast gland adipose tissue is associated with different rates of major adverse cardiac events (MACES) in pre-menopausal women. BACKGROUND To our knowledge, no study investigated the impact of breast adipose tissue infiltration on MACEs in pre-menopausal women. METHODS Prospective multicenter cohort study conducted on pre-menopausal women >40 years of age without cardiovascular disease and breast cancer at enrollment. The study started in January 2000 and ended in January 2009, and the end of the follow-up for the evaluation of MACEs was in January 2019. Participants underwent mammography to evaluate breast density and were divided into 4groups according to their breast density. The primary endpoint was the probability of a MACE at 10 years of follow-up in patients staged for different breast deposition/adipose tissue deposition. RESULTS The propensity score matching divided the baseline population of 16,763 pre-menopausal women, leaving 3,272 women according to the category of breast density from A to D. These women were assigned to 4 groups of the study according to baseline breast density. At 10 years of follow-up, we had 160 MACEs in group 1, 62 MACEs in group 2, 27 MACEs in group 3, and 16 MACEs in group 4. MACEs were predicted by the initial diagnosis of lowest breast density (hazard ratio: 3.483; 95% confidence interval: 1.476 to 8.257). Further randomized clinical trials are needed to translate the results of the present study into clinical practice. The loss of ex vivo breast density models to study the cellular/ molecular pathways implied in MACE is another study limitation. CONCLUSIONS Among pre-menopausal women, a higher evidence of adipose tissue at the level of breast gland (lowest breast density, category A) versus higher breast density shows higher rates of MACEs. Therefore, the screening mammography could be proposed in overweight women to stage breast density and to predict MACEs. (C) 2021 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.

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