4.3 Article

Endometriosis and risk of ovarian and endometrial cancers in a large prospective cohort of US nurses

Journal

CANCER CAUSES & CONTROL
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 437-445

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10552-017-0856-4

Keywords

Endometriosis; Ovarian cancer; Endometrial cancer

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 HD57210, UM1 CA176726]
  2. Dana Farber Cancer Institute Mazzone Award

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Endometriosis is associated with ovarian cancer, but the relation with endometrial cancer is unclear. Prior studies generally were retrospective and had potential limitations, including use of self-reported endometriosis, failure to account for delays between symptom onset and endometriosis diagnosis, and changes in risk factors post-endometriosis diagnosis. We evaluated whether these limitations obscured a weak association with endometrial cancer and the extent to which these limitations impacted associations with ovarian cancer. Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to assess associations between endometriosis and cancer risk, evaluating the impacts of self-reported vs. laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis, delayed diagnosis, and post-endometriosis diagnosis changes in risk factor exposures on relative risk estimates. Over 18 years of follow-up, we identified 228 ovarian and 166 endometrial cancers among 102,025 and 97,109 eligible women, respectively. Self-reported endometriosis was associated with ovarian cancer [relative risk (RR): 1.81; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.26-2.58]; this association was stronger for laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis (HR: 2.14; 95% CI 1.45-3.15). No association was observed with endometrial cancer (self-report RR: 0.78; 95% CI 0.42-1.44; laparoscopic-confirmation RR: 0.76; 95% CI 0.35-1.64). Accounting for diagnosis delays or post-endometriosis diagnosis changes in risk factors had a little impact. This study adds to the evidence that endometriosis is not strongly linked to endometrial cancer risk and that the association with ovarian cancer is robust to misclassification, diagnostic delay, and changes in exposures post-endometriosis diagnosis. Our analysis suggests that confounding and misclassification do not obscure a weak association for endometrial cancer risk, although our results should be replicated.

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