Objective: To investigate whether size at birth and rate of fetal growth influence the risk of breast cancer in adulthood.
Design: Cohort identified from detailed birth records, with 97% follow up.
Setting: Uppsala Academic Hospital, Sweden.
Melanocytic nevi are the most potent risk factors for melanoma yet identified. Variation in the nevus phenotype within a population is predominantly genetically determined. Genes that determine nevus expression may therefore act as low penetrance melanoma susceptibility genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In recent studies a larger birth size has been shown to delay the timing of menarche. The mechanisms underlying this association are not clear, however, as birthweight is a predictor of body size in childhood, and a large body size is known to be associated with an early onset of menarche.
Methods: Data from a representative British cohort of 2547 girls born in 1946 who were followed prospectively throughout childhood were used.
To investigate the role of lifelong vegetarianism on the aetiology of female breast cancer, we conducted a population-based case-control study among South Asian migrant women from the Indian subcontinent resident in England. A total of 240 South Asian breast cancer cases were identified from 2 cancer registries during 1995-1999. For each case, 2 age-matched South Asian controls were randomly selected from the age-sex register of the case practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Studies on ethnic variations in health have played an important role in aetiological and health services research. Most routine datasets, however, do not include information on ethnicity. South Asians, one of the largest minority ethnic groups in Britain, have distinctive names that also allow differentiation of the main sub-groups with their important differences in health-related exposures and disease risks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAssociations have been found between birth weight and many diseases in adult life. In most countries, few birth records exist for older adults; therefore, birth weight is usually obtained by maternal recall or self-report. This study examined determinants of the availability and accuracy of self-report in middle-aged and elderly women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
June 2001
It has been hypothesized that women who metabolize their endogenous estrogens predominantly via 16(alpha)-hydroxylation rather than via 2-hydroxylation and, as a result, have a low ratio of 2-hydroxyestrone (2-OHE1):16(alpha)-hydroxyestrone (16(alpha)-OHE1) are at an increased risk of breast cancer. Epidemiological evidence in support of this hypothesis is scarce and mostly based on measurements made after the onset of the disease. To gain insight into the role of these metabolites in the etiology of breast cancer, we assessed their relationship with high-density Wolfe mammographic parenchymal patterns (P2/DY), a recognized indicator of risk of this tumor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIf infections are involved in the aetiology of childhood leukaemia then seasonal variation in the birth or onset dates of the malignancy may be apparent. Previous studies that have examined seasonality of these dates have produced conflicting results. Using population-based data from the National Registry of Childhood Tumours we conducted a larger study than any to date of 15 835 cases of childhood leukaemia born and diagnosed in the UK between 1953-95.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrefoil factor family domain peptides (TFF) are thought to be involved in mucosal epithelial restitution and wound healing of the gastrointestinal tract and are up-regulated in ulceration and in a variety of solid tumours. It was hypothesized that TFFs are also expressed on mucosal surfaces of the human respiratory tract. Lung tissue, nasal polyps, and sputum samples from seven patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), two with chronic and acute bronchitis, and non-dysplastic material from two cases of bronchial adenocarcinoma were analysed for TFF expression by immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence, western blot and RT-PCR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Portuguese Thorotrast study cohort consists of a group of patients who received Thorotrast for diagnostic reasons between 1929 and 1956, and a group of similar patients who were given nonradioactive contrast agents. The cohort members were identified from medical records that contained information on reasons for the radiological investigation, type of procedure employed, and name and dose of the contrast medium used. This cohort was assembled in 1961, but its follow-up was interrupted in 1976.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe incidence of testicular cancer has been increasing markedly in most industrialised countries. This rise is known to have affected young adults, but it is less clear whether it has affected other age groups, particularly children. We used data from the National Cancer Registry file at the Office of National Statistics (ONS) and the National Registry of Childhood Tumours to examine trends in testicular germ-cell malignancies overall in England and Wales from 1962 to 1990 and in children from 1962 to 1995.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe winged helix transcription factors HNF-3/FKH (forkhead homologs) activate endodermal-derived and acute-phase gene expression and control gut development in Drosophila. Trefoil factor family (TFFs) peptides are vertebrate products secreted by mucin-producing epithelial cells of the gastrointestinal tract involved in restitution and repair of the mucosa. They are positively regulated in ulcerative and neoplastic conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptides belonging to the trefoil factor family (TFF) protect the gastrointestinal epithelia. Overexpression of TFFs was observed in pathological conditions such as gastritis, ulceration, metaplasia and neoplasia of the gastrointestinal tract. The aims of this work were to investigate the recently described TFF2 gene polymorphism in different European populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSecular and cohort trends in mortality from cancer in Scotland during 1953-93, and incidence during 1960-90, were analysed using individual records from the national mortality and registration files. For certain cancer sites, the secular analyses of mortality were extended back to 1911 by use of published data. Mortality from cancer at older ages in Scotland has increased over the last 40 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere are marked socioeconomic variations in the risk of female reproductive cancers. We examine here data from the World Fertility Surveys, the Demographic and Health Surveys, and other national surveys, to assess whether these variations in cancer risk might be explained, at least in part, by socioeconomic variations in reproductive behaviour. There were marked socioeconomic differentials in achieved parity, age at first birth, final childlessness, duration of breastfeeding, and possibly also age at menopause.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDifferences between the sexes in time trends of colorectal cancer incidence 1962-87 and mortality 1960-91 in England and Wales are examined in relation to changes in female hormonal factors. There was a trend in the sex ratio of this tumour, particularly marked for the descending colon, whereby the female excess in risk at young ages has almost disappeared but the male excess at older ages has increased. This trend started for cohorts born since the 1920s and coincided with the increase in the use of oral contraceptives and, to a lesser extent, with increases in fertility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of changes in recording and coding of cause of death on trends in cancer mortality in England and Wales in persons aged 45 and over during 1970-1990 is reviewed. During this period, all-cancer mortality rates increased only at ages over 75 in males and over 55 in females. Rises in cancer mortality were largely due to increases in cancer of lung, prostate and unspecified site in men, and of lung, breast and unspecified site in women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReproductive-related factors play a major role in the aetiology of cancers of the breast, ovary and endometrium. Pregnancy history influences the risk of each of these cancers, and oral contraceptive use modifies the risks of ovarian and endometrial cancers, although its effect on breast cancer risk is less certain. We analysed recent time trends in the incidence and mortality of these cancers in England and Wales and assessed whether they can be explained by changes in fertility and oral contraceptive use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe p65 subunit of the inducible transcription factor NF-kappa B contains at least two strong transactivation domains (TADs) within its C terminus. The first domain, TA1, is contained within the last 30 amino acids of p65, whereas TA2 comprises the adjacent 90 amino acids. In this study, squelching experiments revealed that both TADs of p65, as well as the related subunit c-Rel, compete for the same cofactor(s) mediating transactivation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRelatively little is known about the epidemiology of carcinoid tumours in contrast to the extensive information available on their biochemical effects and natural history. Accordingly, we have used cancer registrations in England from 1979 to 1987, and in Scotland from 1980 to 1989, to estimate the incidence of carcinoid tumours in Britain. Age-standardised incidence rates for England, based on 3,382 registrations, were 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe p65 subunit of the NF-kappa B transcription factor contains in its C-terminal 120 amino acids at least two transcription activation domains. One domain (TA1) is contained within only the 30 C-terminal amino acids. Structural studies employing CD and NMR spectroscopy revealed that the TA1 domain is unstructured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere are marked variations in the risk of hormone-dependent cancers between males and females, and these are likely to reflect sex differences in endogenous hormone profiles. The authors examined sex differences in the risk of hormone-dependent cancers of sex-shared sites by using data from the England and Wales national cancer registry for 1962-1984. Both breast and thyroid cancers showed marked excesses in risk for women, but the female: male ratio peaked around menopause for breast cancer and a puberty for thyroid cancer, suggesting that although female sex hormones may influence the risk of these two cancers, the mechanisms involved are probably different.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThyroid cancer incidence has been increasing in many countries, whereas mortality has been falling due to better survival. Radiation is the best-established risk factor and there has been concern that recent rises in incidence might be related to fallout radiation from atmospheric nuclear weapon tests. We examined thyroid cancer time trends and geographical distribution in England and Wales and possible interpretations of these.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe distribution of cancers of the lung and stomach in the counties of England and Wales in 1968-81 was mapped, and compared to the distribution in the country in 1921-30 described by Stocks. The high risk of stomach cancer in North Wales noted by Stocks was found still to exist in each sex, although its disparity from the rest of the country has diminished. In general the geographic distribution of stomach cancer in both periods has paralleled that of post-neonatal mortality, at the same time and earlier, as an index of general poverty, but postneonatal mortality in North Wales has not been exceptionally high.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe epidemiology of germ cell cancer of the ovary has been little investigated. We studied ovarian germ cell cancers incident 1971-84 in England, using data from the England and Wales national cancer register. The age distribution showed a sharp peak at ages 15-19, to which both teratomas and dysgerminomas contributed equally, and a secondary, much wider peak, at ages 65-69, mainly due to teratomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF