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Modifiable risk factors in women at high risk of breast cancer: a systematic review

Journal

BREAST CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13058-023-01636-1

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Modifiable risk factors such as alcohol, smoking, obesity, hormone use, and physical activity can affect a woman's risk of breast cancer. However, the impact of these factors on women with inherited risk (family history, BRCA1/2 mutations, or familial cancer syndrome) is still unclear. Further research is needed to better understand how these modifiable risk factors influence breast cancer risk in women with inherited risk due to the heterogeneity and limited power of existing studies.
BackgroundModifiable risk factors (alcohol, smoking, obesity, hormone use, and physical activity) affect a woman's breast cancer (BC) risk. Whether these factors affect BC risk in women with inherited risk (family history, BRCA1/2 mutations, or familial cancer syndrome) remains unclear.MethodsThis review included studies on modifiable risk factors for BC in women with inherited risk. Pre-determined eligibility criteria were used and relevant data were extracted.ResultsThe literature search resulted in 93 eligible studies. For women with family history, most studies indicated that modifiable risk factors had no association with BC and some indicated decreased (physical activity) or increased risk (hormonal contraception (HC)/menopausal hormone therapy (MHT), smoking, alcohol). For women with BRCA mutations, most studies reported no association between modifiable risk factors and BC; however, some observed increased (smoking, MHT/HC, body mass index (BMI)/weight) and decreased risk (alcohol, smoking, MHT/HC, BMI/weight, physical activity). However, measurements varied widely among studies, sample sizes were often small, and a limited number of studies existed.ConclusionsAn increasing number of women will recognize their underlying inherited BC risk and seek to modify that risk. Due to heterogeneity and limited power of existing studies, further studies are needed to better understand how modifiable risk factors influence BC risk in women with inherited risk.

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