Associations of oral contraceptives with mammographic breast density in premenopausal women. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: We investigated the associations of oral contraceptives (OCs) with percent breast density (PD), absolute dense area (DA), non-dense area (NDA), and a novel image intensity variation (V) measure in premenopausal women. METHODS: This study included 1,233 controls from a nested case-control study within Nurses' Health Study II cohort. Information on OCs was collected in 1989 and updated biennially. OC use was defined from the questionnaire closest to the mammogram date. PD, DA, and NDA were measured from digitized film mammograms using a computer-assisted thresholding technique; the V measure was obtained with a previously developed algorithm measuring the standard deviation of pixel values in the eroded breast region. Generalized linear regression was used to assess associations between OCs and density measures (square root-transformed PD, DA, and NDA, and untransformed V). RESULTS: OC use was not associated with PD (current vs. never: β=-0.06, 95%CI -0.37,0.24; past vs. never: β=0.10, 95%CI -0.09,0.29), DA (current vs. never: β=-0.20, 95%CI -0.59,0.18; past vs. never: β=0.13, 95%CI -0.12,0.39), and NDA (current vs. never: β=-0.19, 95%CI -0.56,0.18; past vs. never: β=-0.01, 95%CI -0.28,0.25). Women with younger age at initiation had significantly greater V-measure (<20 years vs. never β=26.88, 95%CI 3.18,50.58; 20-24 years vs. never β=20.23, 95%CI -4.24,44.71; 25-29 years vs. never β=2.61, 95%CI -29.00,34.23; {greater than or equal to}30 years vs. never β=0.28, 95%CI -34.16,34.72, p-trend=0.03). CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that an earlier age at first OC use was associated with significantly greater V. IMPACT: These findings could guide decisions about the age for OC initiation.

publication date

  • December 3, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Breast
  • Breast Density
  • Contraceptives, Oral
  • Premenopause

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-21-0853

PubMed ID

  • 34862209