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1 Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics and 2 Applied Research Branch, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, MD; 3 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of California at Irvine Medical Center, Irvine, CA; 4 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, PA; 5 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Minnesota Health Sciences Center, Minneapolis, MN; 6 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC; 7 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Rush Medical College, Chicago, IL; and 8 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL
Requests for reprints: James V. Lacey, Jr., National Cancer Institute, 6120 Executive Boulevard, MSC 7234, Rockville, MD 20852-7234. Fax: (301) 402-0916. E-mail: jimlacey{at}nih.gov
| Abstract |
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Key Words: IGF-1 uterine cancer estrogen progestin epidemiology
| Introduction |
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Within endometrial tissue, insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) may mediate the proliferative effects of estrogen (7). IGF-1 is a member of the IGF family, which includes IGF-1 and IGF-2, their receptors (IGF-1R and IGF-2R), and at least six binding proteins (IGFBP-1 through IGFBP-6) (8). IGF-1 and IGF-2 are potent mitogens and have anti-apoptotic properties, whereas the IGFBPs tend to reduce the amount of bioavailable IGFs and counteract their proliferative actions. Higher levels of IGF-1 have been associated with an increased risk of a number of epithelial cancers (9), and correlations between higher estrogen levels and IGF-1 expression and between higher progesterone levels and IGFBP-1 levels provide a potential link between the IGF system, the estrogen-progesterone balance, and endometrial cancer risk (10, 11).
Until recently, the available data on IGFs, IGFBPs, and endometrial cancer consisted almost exclusively of small clinic-based investigations (12, 13). Primarily null associations, but a few potential positive associations, appeared in three case-control studies that examined IGFs and IGFBPs. The study of Petridou et al. (14) showed positive and inverse associations with IGF-2 and IGF-1, respectively, whereas the results of Weiderpass et al. (15 were null except for a potential positive association with IGFBP-1 among women who never used menopausal hormone theraphy. The nested case-control study from Lukanovaet al. 16) using data from three cohorts reported an inverse association with IGFBP-1, but no associations with IGF-1, IGFBP-2, or IGFBP-3. To provide additional data with which to assess these inconsistencies, we evaluated IGFs and IGFBPs in a multicenter U.S. endometrial cancer case-control study, which has previously provided information on risk associated with endogenous hormones (3), obesity (6), C-peptide (17), and other risk factors (1820).
| Methods |
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65 years) cases. All potential controls completed a short questionnaire to ascertain hysterectomy status; additional eligible potential controls replaced women who reported a hysterectomy. Because we identified the cases from referral hospitals and used community-based controls, we included a second control group to potentially improve the comparability with the case patients. Women who were having a hysterectomy for benign conditions at the seven referral centers were matched on age, race, and location to cases; as necessary, matching criteria, especially age, were relaxed. Uterine leiomyoma (63%) were the most common primary diagnoses for postmenopausal hysterectomy control subjects (3). Home interviews were obtained for 434 of 498 eligible cases (87.1%), 313 of 477 eligible community controls (65.6%; n = 304 from RDD and n = 173 from HCFA), and 206 of 253 eligible hysterectomy controls (81.4%).
Institutional review boards at NCI and each clinic approved this study.
Blood Collection
We collected fasting blood samples from cases and hysterectomy controls before their surgery, and from community controls, usually within 1 month of their interview. Of the 434 interviewed cases, 325 (74.9%) donated blood samples. Of the 519 total interviewed controls, 356 (68.6%) donated blood samples. We excluded samples from 49 case women and 39 control women who reported exogenous estrogen or oral contraceptive use within 6 months of blood draw, and from 1 control woman who was pregnant at the time of blood draw.
Laboratory Analysis
This analysis followed a number of previous laboratory analyses from this study population, and therefore no sera remained for 33 cases, 34 community controls, and 3 hysterectomy controls. We excluded these participants. To focus on postmenopausal women, in whom endometrial cancer rates are highest and the role of endogenous hormones can be most clearly studied, we excluded premenopausal women (68 cases, 53 community controls, and 54 hysterectomy controls).
We shipped sera to Diagnostic Systems Laboratories (DSL; Webster, TX), who used ELISA to analyze samples in case-control pairs masked to case status. In each batch of 36 samples, we inserted four blinded quality surveillance specimens to monitor assay quality. We obtained these quality control samples from three individuals who were expected to cover the low, medium, and high range of IGFs levels.
DSL measured IGF-1, IGF-2, IGFBP-1, and IGFBP-3 twice for each sample and re-assayed samples if the duplicate measures differed by more than 10%. We used the mean value for all statistical analysis. We also excluded 1 case, 13 community controls, and 2 hysterectomy controls because of ambiguities in specimen identification.
Statistical Analysis
We excluded the 21 hysterectomy controls who reportedly had endometrial hyperplasia, and therefore may have been at increased risk for endometrial cancer (21). Mean IGF levels were substantially lower among the hysterectomy controls with hyperplasia than among the hysterectomy controls without endometrial hyperplasia and among the community controls (data not shown). The final analytic data set included 174 postmenopausal cases and 136 controls (98 community controls and 38 hysterectomy controls; Table 1).
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65 years), race (non-Hispanic white versus all other), study site [Chicago (Northwestern), IL; Chicago (Rush), IL; Hershey, PA; Irvine, CA; Long Beach, CA; Minneapolis, MN; or Winston-Salem, NC], body mass index (BMI, calculated as kg/m2; <23.19, 23.1926.83, or >26.83 kg/m2), and sex-hormone binding globulin (on a log scale; <3.53, 3.534.05, or >4.05 nM). Additional adjustment for factors such as serum hormones, smoking, duration of menopausal estrogen use, or C-peptide levels did not appreciably change the results, and therefore we present only the parsimonious final model. | Results |
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256 mg/dl) were inversely associated while increasing duration of menopausal estrogen use (OR = 6.27 for
60 months), higher BMI (OR = 3.63 for
26.84 kg/m2), higher waist-to-thigh ratio (OR = 3.58 for
1.915), higher log androstenedione levels (OR = 2.64 for
4.37 ng/dl), and higher log albumin-bound estradiol (OR = 3.08 for
0.77 pg/ml) were positively associated with endometrial cancer in analyses adjusted for study site, age, and race. As in a previous study analysis, a positive association with higher serum C-peptide levels (OR = 2.22 for
2.3 ng/ml) in models adjusted for study matching factors disappeared after additional adjustment for BMI and SHBG levels (OR = 0.75, 95% CI, 0.341.66).
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Mean levels (and interquartile ranges) in cases versus controls for IGF-1, IGF-2, IGFBP-1, and IGFBP-3 were 94.02 ng/ml (57.25125.7) versus 102.98 ng/ml (67.75122.20); 622.31 ng/ml (475.85743.60) versus 694.89 ng/ml (532.63809.53); 44.4 ng/ml (15.657.0) versus 51.3 ng/ml (24.071.2); and 3295.55 ng/ml (2610.003845.00) versus 3683.38 ng/ml (3025.25 4219.50), respectively. The coefficients of variation (CV), taking into account intra- and inter-assay variability, for IGF-1, IGF-2, IGFBP-1, and IGFBP-3 were 50%, 12.9%, 10.1%, and 10%, respectively. The mean IGF-1 level among the QC samples in the first two batches270.62 ng/ml among cases and 308.28 ng/ml among controlswas approximately 3 times higher than the mean IGF-1 level among the QC samples in the other batches. After excluding these two batches, the CV for IGF-1 was 12.9%. We therefore excluded all batch 1 and batch 2 results for the IGF-1 analysis only (a total of 31 cases and 28 controls). One additional case and 4 more controls had missing IGF-1 data. For the IGF-1 models, these exclusions generated empty cells in some study site strata and led us to combine two study sites (MN and NC) into one in multivariate regression models.
ORs for the second and third tertiles of IGF-1 were below 1.0, but neither was statistically significant (Table 3). Increasing IGF-2 levels were inversely and significantly associated with endometrial cancer, and the OR for the highest tertile was 0.35 (95% CI, 0.180.69).
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Although we recognized that some strata would contain small sample sizes, we explored the potential statistical interactions with BMI, SHBG, menopausal hormone therapy, and oral contraceptives. Only 33 and 46 participants had ever used menopausal hormones and oral contraceptives, respectively; restricting analyses to never-users produced no substantial change in the data. On the basis of median BMI and SHBG cutpoints, we saw no compelling evidence of stratum-specific associations. For IGF-1 and IGF-2, stratum-specific ORs were at or below 1.0, with the lone exception of the highest tertile of IGF-1 among women with SHBG above the median (OR = 1.46, 95% CI, 0.544.00). The inverse association with IGFBP-3 appeared in all BMI and SHBG strata.
Because IGFBP-3 binds most IGF-1 in serum, we evaluated the associations between endometrial cancer and the ratios of IGF-1 to IGFBP-3 and IGF-1 to IGFBP-1. Neither was significantly associated with endometrial cancer. The ORs for the highest ratio tertiles were 0.76 (95% CI, 0.361.62) for IGF-1 to IGFBP-3 and 0.47 (95% CI, 0.201.10) for IGF-1 to IGFBP-1.
We repeated the IGFs and IGFBPs analyses after excluding the 38 hysterectomy controls, but the results did not materially change. The associations for IGF-1, IGF-2, IGFBP-1, and IGFBP-3 were not dramatically changed after excluding the 45 women (32 cases and 13 controls) who had diabetes and the 1 case whose diabetes status was unknown (data not shown).
| Discussion |
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Two clinic-based studies directly evaluated circulating IGFs and IGFBPs in women with and without endometrial cancer, and some of their results mirror our data. One investigation that compared 32 endometrial cancer patients with 18 non-cancer patients noted lower IGF-1, IGF-2, and IGFBP-3 levels among cancer patients, but no difference in IGFBP-1 or IGFBP-2 (12). Another, of 23 patients and 27 hospital-based controls, reported higher IGF-1 but lower IGFBP-1 and IGFBP-3 in endometrial cancer patients (13). However, neither study included sufficient information about study population selection methods or distribution of potential confounders, and small sample size limited both studies.
Three studies sincean 84-case and 84-control study from Greece (14), a 288-case and 392-control study from Sweden (15), and a 166-case and 315-control study nested in cohorts from New York, Umea, Sweden, and Milan, Italy (16)have more systematically analyzed IGFs, IGFBPs, and endometrial cancer. Adding our data to these reports reveals some patterns about potential associations with endometrial cancer. Analytic details slightly differed in the four studies, but each investigation used a generally accepted laboratory analysis and had roughly the same breadth and depth of other risk factor information available for multivariate modeling. All four reported ORs below 1.0 for higher IGF-1 levels, but only our data and a joint assessment of IGF-1, IGF-2, and IGFBP-3 in the Greek study (14) showed potentially strong inverse associations. That study was the only investigation other than ours to analyze IGF-2, and the two studies produced exactly opposite associations. IGFBP-1 generated null associations in our and the Swedish data (15) but an inverse association in the pooled nested case-control study (16). The IGFBP-3 data vary most substantially across the four studies: null associations in two studies (14, 15), a significant positive association in one, (16) and a significant inverse association here. To date, none of the epidemiological data supports the hypothesis that higher IGF-1 levels increase risk. The inconsistent data on IGF-2 and IGFBPs may reflect chance variation, true associations, or more complex relationships between insulin, the IGF system, and other endometrial cancer risk factors.
Despite the clear absence of an increased endometrial cancer risk among women with higher IGFs, steroid hormones appear to influence IGFs and IGFBPs levels in the endometrium. Estrogens stimulate IGF-1 production and inhibit IGFBP-3 synthesis (7, 10, 11, 22), as does tamoxifen (23, 24). IGF-1 gene expression was higher in tissue taken from endometrial cancer patients than from women without endometrial cancer in two small studies (25, 26), and IGFs were shown to stimulate in vitro endometrial cancer cell growth (11). Progestins appear to increase IGFBP levels (2, 10, 27). The balance between IGFs and IGFBPs could influence endometrial cell proliferation similarly to the balance between estrogen and progesterone (7), but the IGFs system might also merely be a surrogate for steroid hormone activity (28).
Our IGFs and IGFBPs data should be interpreted in conjunction with other previous publications from this study, where endogenous estrogenic and androgenic hormones increased risk (3) but did not seem to completely explain the increased risk associated with higher body weight (6). In contrast, fasting C-peptide levels, which reflect insulin secretion, were only associated with endometrial cancer before statistical adjustment for BMI (17). The endogenous estrogens and androgen data are consistent with the unopposed estrogen theory, but our null associations with C-peptide and IGF-1, and the inverse association with IGF-2, do not support a direct additional role for ovarian hyperandrogenism and insulin (2). These null or inverse associations appeared in analyses performed with and without adjustment for serum estrogen levels and remained null or inverse after assessing potential confounders, which could indicate that IGFs are not mere surrogates for endogenous hormones. This issue, however, clearly warrants continued research, which would ideally occur in much larger studies that include prediagnostic and multiple sample collections.
This study's limitations deserve attention. First, as in many retrospective studies, we collected single biologic specimens for IGFs and IGFBPs analyses after the patients had been diagnosed with endometrial cancer. Our serum measurements could not address local IGF or IGFBP production in the endometrium. Second, although we reported acceptable CVs, the laboratory assay for IGF-1 displays considerable variability. After exclusion of two aberrant batches of IGF-1 results, the CVs were low, but other effects of measurement error are possible. Third, our statistical analysis did not include all of the original study participants because prior analyses had depleted all biological material for some participants. Unacceptably high coefficients of variation for IGF-1 measurements in two analytic batches (which we excluded) further reduced the sample size available for this analysis. Bias arising solely due to an association between IGF or IGFBP levels and the amount of serum consumed in prior analyses or lower volumes of donated serum seems unlikely, but each scenario is hypothetically possible. Major biases arising due to our exclusions also seem unlikely because (a) the risk factor associations (both for questionnaire data and serum hormones) in the current analytic population were nearly identical to those from our previous publications that used the larger study population, and (b) those risk factor associations did not differ in the included participants versus the excluded participants. Fourth, polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) may unify a number of the risk factors investigated or discussed here (27), but we had minimal information on the diagnosis of PCOS among our study subjects; only two cases and six controls reported this condition (18). Finally, to strongly implicate one particular IGF or IGFBP in endometrial carcinogenesis would require a complete assessment of the IGFs system, which neither we nor the other recent studies have attempted.
In conclusion, higher IGF-1 levels were not associated with an increased endometrial cancer risk in postmenopausal women, and may be associated with a decreased risk. Higher IGF-2 and IGFBP-3 levels were associated with a decreased risk. The association between bioavailable IGF-1 and endometrial proliferation provides a potentially relevant mechanism for endometrial carcinogenesis, our results and other recent studies provide no epidemiological support for the hypothesis that higher IGFs increase risk. Continued progress on the relationships between steroid hormones and the insulin system may help to identify crucial components of the endometrial cancer pathway that are potentially amenable to intervention.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 8/27/03; revised 12/12/03; accepted 12/17/03.
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