4.5 Article

Breast Tissue Composition-Why It Matters and How Can We Measure It More Accurately in Epidemiology Studies

Journal

CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION
Volume 30, Issue 4, Pages 590-592

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-20-1807

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Research has shown that changes in body size across different life stages can affect breast tissue composition, with larger body size associated with higher breast adipose tissue concentrations and lower stromal tissue concentrations, while the levels of epithelial tissue decrease with larger body size. Further studies on these associations are crucial for understanding the development of breast cancer.
Early-life body size has been consistently associated with breast cancer risk. The direction of the association changes over time, with high birth weight, smaller adolescent body size, and adult weight gain all increasing breast cancer risk. There is also a clear positive association between larger body size and increased breast adipose tissue measured by mammograms, but less is known about how body size changes across life stages affect stromal and epithelial breast tissue. Using breast tissue slides from women with benign breast disease, Oh and colleagues applied machine learning methods to evaluate body size across the life course and adipose, epithelial, and stromal tissue con- centrations in adulthood. They found consistent patterns for higher adipose and lower stromal tissue concentrations with larger childhood and adult body size at age 18 years. They reported lower levels of epithelial tissue with larger body size at 18 years, but not at other time periods. Additional studies examining how body size at different life stages may affect breast tissue composition will be important. Noninvasive methods that can provide measures of breast tissue composition may offer potential ways forward to ensure generalizability, and repeated measurements by life stage.

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