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1 Applied Research Program, 2 Statistical Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, 3 Epidemiology Program, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland; 4 Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; and 5 University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts
Requests for reprints: Nancy Potischman, Applied Research Program, Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, National Cancer Institute, 4005 EPN, 6130 Executive Boulevard, Bethesda, MD 20892-7344. Phone: 301-594-6573; Fax: 301-435-3710. E-mail: potischn{at}mail.nih.gov
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Differences in exposures at early ages, which are captured by where one is born, may have substantial impact on later breast cancer risk (8). Pregnancy hormone levels and the in utero environment differ across women (9), and possibly across ethnic groups that vary in their risk of breast cancer. A study by Lipworth and coworkers (10) compared pregnancy hormones between a group at high risk of breast cancer, Caucasians in Boston, and a group at low risk of breast cancer, Chinese in Shanghai. Contrary to expectations, the Chinese women had higher levels of all hormones (estradiol, estriol, prolactin, progesterone, growth hormone) and binding proteins [sex hormonebinding globulin (SHBG) and albumin] measured at two time points in the pregnancy. In contrast, nonpregnant women in China and Japan have lower levels of circulating steroid hormones compared with Caucasian women living in Western countries (11-15). Down-regulation of estrogen receptors in the breast tissue of Asians has been investigated as a possible explanation (16, 17) but further studies are warranted.
Within the U.S., breast cancer rates also differ by ethnic group. Hispanics in the U.S. immigrate from a variety of countries and have a diversity of ethnic backgrounds, but in general, their age-adjusted incidence rates of breast cancer are lower than those of nonHispanic Whites (89.6 versus 141.7 per 100,000, respectively; ref. 18). Thus, there is interest in the factors associated with the lower risk among this ethnic group. Compared with Caucasian women, African-American women have lower incidence rates of breast cancer (141.7 versus 119.9 per 100,000, respectively) but a higher mortality among African-American women (26.4 versus 35.4 per 100,000, respectively; ref. 18). There are also a variety of differences in tumor characteristics between African-American and Caucasian breast cancers (19-22) and interest in their determinants.
High socioeconomic status has been associated with increased risk of breast cancer (23), suggesting that socioeconomic factors may explain some of the disparities in breast cancer rates across ethnic groups in the U.S. (24, 25). Given that hormonal profiles are thought to be related to risk of breast cancer, evaluating hormone profiles by measures of socioeconomic status, as well as ethnic background, may provide insight into differences in breast cancer rates across groups. In our study, we evaluated pregnancy hormones in Hispanic, Caucasian, and African-American women in the Boston metropolitan area, who vary in their risk of breast cancer. For example, the age-standardized breast cancer incidence rate for Hispanics in Massachusetts was 92.1/100,000, whereas the rate for nonHispanic Whites was 147.4/100,000 and for nonHispanic Blacks was 108.9/100,000 for the years 1997 to 2001 (26). These rates are similar to the national data (18). In addition to assessing hormone differences across ethnic groups, we evaluated the impact of income and education, as measures of socioeconomic status, on pregnancy hormone concentrations.
| Materials and Methods |
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4,200 women in three clinics in the Boston, MA area (Massachusetts General Hospital, Revere and Chelsea). Informed consent was obtained at the first visit. All pregnant women attending the clinics are asked to participate. During a routine 45-minute interview at their first prenatal visit, women provide health and demographic information that is entered into electronic records. Approximately 70% of the women also provide a blood sample. Demographic, medical, and health characteristics of the mothers and babies, such as maternal age, body mass index, nulliparity, blood pressure, race, marital status, and birth weight, were similar for participants and nonparticipants. For this investigation, we obtained a sample from a data set of 4,199 pregnant women ascertained by January 2002. We excluded women who did not provide a blood sample (n = 374). In an effort to evaluate normal pregnancies, we also excluded women with conditions known or likely to affect circulating hormone levels. These exclusions included women who had developed gestational hypertension (n = 87), preeclampsia (n = 127), gestational diabetes (11), had a twin pregnancy (n = 103), neonatal death (n = 18), or had not completed their pregnancies (n = 770). From this data set of 2,709 women, we further excluded women <18 years of age (n = 51), with a home zip code outside of Massachusetts (n = 145), a blood sample drawn outside of 6 to 20 weeks gestation (n = 97), and unknown parity, education, or race (n = 313). The sample for this study was then selected from the remaining 2,103 eligible women. To the extent possible, we chose African-American, Caucasian, and Hispanic participants to be comparable on age (within 3 years) and clinic. Additional Caucasian subjects were included to have approximately equal numbers of Caucasians with 0 to 12 and 13 or more years of education. These subjects were also chosen to be similar with respect to age and clinic. Attempts to stratify on clinic were not entirely successful, with the greatest limitation being that African-Americans represented 6% of all patients seen in the Massachusetts General Hospital study. There were reasonable numbers from each ethnic group from each clinic, with the exception of few Caucasians from Chelsea (4%) and few African-Americans from Chelsea and Revere (11% in each). The study sample is comprised of 420 women (109 Hispanic, 56 African-American, and 255 Caucasians). All personal identifiers were removed from the data file and received approval from the Office of Human Subjects Research at the NIH.
Our gestational age variable was estimated at the first prenatal visit based on last menstrual period. In an attempt to validate this gestational age variable and to evaluate any bias in the estimation of gestational age by ethnic group or by socioeconomic factors, we obtained ultrasound data on a subset of 74 women. Calculated gestational age for the first prenatal visit based on ultrasound was not significantly different from estimated gestational age from the last menstrual period. Mean differences were largely less than half a week across ethnic groups and educational groups (i.e., differences between reported and calculated gestational age ranged from 0.2 weeks for African-American women with higher education to 0.6 weeks for Caucasians with higher education). Therefore, all analyses used the estimated gestational age from the first prenatal visit, which was based on the reported last menstrual period.
Blood samples were drawn at the first prenatal visit and stored at 80°C until they were thawed for laboratory analyses. All assays were done at the Reproductive Endocrinology Laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital using direct methods. Samples from each ethnic group were included in each batch in a balanced manner to remove potential differences between batches. SHBG, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), and progesterone were measured using a fully automated system (Immulite, DPC, Inc., Los Angeles, CA). The method is a solid-phase chemiluminescent enzyme immunometric assay. Estradiol and prolactin were measured using a microparticle enzyme immunoassay on a continuous access immunoanalyzer (AxSYM, Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Illinois). The assay measures estradiol and prolactin directly in serum specimens and is not influenced by any other serum proteins. Estrone was measured directly in serum using a coated tube RIA kit (Diagnostic Systems Laboratories, Webster, TX). Total testosterone and androstenedione were measured directly in serum using a coated tube RIA kit (Diagnostics Products Corp, Los Angeles, CA). Specimens with high concentrations were diluted for most assays of these samples from pregnant women. Laboratory quality control specimens were run in each assay in order to monitor assay performance over time.
External Quality Control
A short pretest of the laboratory evaluated the laboratory technical errors. Six pools, each comprised of blood from five pregnant women who were at
12 weeks of gestation, were tested five times each over 3 days. The laboratory analyzed samples in replicate and reported both values. The intraclass correlation coefficients were >90% for testosterone, DHEAS, estradiol, and estrone, and were 84% for androstenedione and 82% for prolactin. Results for progesterone and SHBG were <50%, however. Discussions with the laboratory revealed sources of errors and problems in the logistics were corrected for the main study.
Quality control samples from nine new pools were inserted with the subjects' blood samples to monitor the performance of the assays that were used for study data. Each pool was tested five times and comprised
10% of all of the samples. Intraclass correlation coefficients were high for estradiol (97%), SHBG (92%), estrone (90%), and androstenedione (85%), and lower for prolactin (76%), testosterone (76%), and progesterone (60%). The intraclass correlation coefficient was <50% for DHEAS. Investigation of patterns of problems revealed sporadic lack of reproducibility across pools, across batches, and across almost all of the analytes. Because all samples were run in replicate, we created a flag for replicates that were >30% different to identify potentially problematic samples so analyses could be run including and excluding these samples.
Statistical Analyses
All maternal hormone values were logarithm-transformed because of skewed distributions. Means and 95% confidence intervals are presented on the natural scale for ease of interpretation (the antilogs of the logarithm-transformed values). Mean hormone concentrations were compared among ethnic groups using analysis of covariance. Information from the first prenatal visit interview were used to derive the health and demographic variables. All models included maternal age and gestational age at blood collection. Further adjustment for education (ordinal variable), income (based on zip code), body mass index (kg/m2) at first prenatal visit, parity (0, 1, 2+), marital status (single, married, other), alcohol (no, current, former), smoking (no, current, former), and offspring gender (male, female, missing) were also evaluated.
| Results |
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To evaluate whether differences in hormone levels by education explained any of the differences in hormones by ethnic group, we evaluated hormones across ethnic groups by educational status (Tables 4 and 5). In general, the pattern of results was similar in the two education strata and the overall analyses, although smaller sample sizes resulted in attenuation of statistical significance. Among women with 0 to 12 years of education, Caucasian women had lower levels of estrone and prolactin compared with Hispanic women and lower levels of androstenedione and testosterone compared with African-American women (Table 4). Estradiol was lower among Caucasian compared with Hispanic and African-American but these differences were not statistically significant (P = 0.07 and 0.21, respectively). Among women with higher education (Table 5), the mean estradiol and estrone concentrations were lower in Caucasians than in either of the other groups, although these differences were not statistically significant. Compared with Hispanic and African-American women, Caucasian women had lower levels of androstenedione, testosterone, and prolactin (P = 0.17 and 0.04, respectively). Finally, similar to the overall group analysis, progesterone was significantly higher in African-American compared with Hispanic women.
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0.001 and P = 0.03, respectively). Among women with female offspring, Hispanic women had the highest prolactin levels (38.9 ng/mL), which were only significantly different from Caucasian women (30.4 ng/mL; P = 0.02).
Adjustment for factors correlated to hormones or ethnic group generally showed similar results to the overall group. In particular, adjustment for income, parity, body mass index at the first prenatal visit, gender of baby, smoking, and alcohol consumption had minimal effects on the results. Of particular interest, removing women who had gestational ages outside of 9 to 13 weeks did not change the results. Removing samples suspected of having laboratory errors, those with >30% difference between replicates of the same sample (n = 15 for DHEAS) and those with low volumes (n = 4 estradiol, n = 1 estrone) did not change results for the estrogens but one result changed for DHEAS. Among those with higher educational attainment (13+ years), the concentration of DHEAS was higher among Caucasians than African-American women (means 116 and 92 µg/dL, respectively; P
0.05).
| Discussion |
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Caucasian women are at higher risk of breast cancer than Hispanic and African-American women (18). In our study, Caucasian women had the lowest values for six of the eight analytes assessed, including the four with the greatest percentage of differences between the highest and lowest values (androstenedione, testosterone, estrone, and prolactin). African-American women had the highest values for five of the eight analytes, including substantial increases in androstenedione, testosterone, and prolactin. Hispanic women had the highest values for estrone, and similarly high serum values as African-American women for prolactin. They had intermediate values for androstenedione, testosterone and estradiol and the lowest values for progesterone. Thus, in our study, the groups at high risk of breast cancer had lower pregnancy estrogens, androgens, and prolactin compared with groups at lower risk of breast cancer. The differences in hormone levels between African-American and Hispanic women were not as consistent as their differences with Caucasians, but the rates of breast cancer between the two former groups are more similar than to rates for Caucasians. Our findings are consistent with those of Lipworth et al. (10) who found lower maternal concentrations of estrogens and androgens in high-risk Caucasian women in Boston compared with low-risk women in China.
Shibata and coworkers (28) found lower levels of estradiol and estrone in the cord bloods of Hispanics compared with Caucasians, and highest levels among Asians. Interestingly, in that study, mothers who were foreign-born had significantly higher estrone levels than U.S.-born mothers of the same race/ethnicity. The general finding of lower levels in cord blood of Hispanics compared with Caucasians is opposite to our findings early in pregnancy. In addition to the difference in timing of the blood collection between the two studies and the differences between cord blood and maternal sera, the differences in ethnic origin of the Hispanic populations may have contributed to the disparity in findings. Although Hispanics in Boston are largely of Puerto Rican descent (29, 30), those in California are likely to be of Mexican descent (30).
African-American males are at substantially reduced risk of testicular cancer compared with Caucasian males (18). Henderson and coworkers hypothesized that the in utero hormonal environment might influence the development of germ cell tumors of the testes (31). Later they evaluated blood from first trimester pregnant African-American and Caucasian women, matched on a variety of factors, and found testosterone to be 48% higher in the African-American women (32). Troisi and coworkers (33) reported testosterone to be 84% higher and androstenedione to be 52% higher in maternal serum of African-American compared with Caucasian women. Our results are consistent with previous findings. In the overall group, we found 69% and 31% higher testosterone and androstenedione levels, respectively, in the African-American compared with the Caucasian women. Furthermore, we observed higher concentrations of prolactin and nonsignificantly elevated estrogens among the African-American women, generating the hypothesis that these hormones could be involved in decreasing the risk of testicular cancer.
Prostate cancer incidence is 1.6 and 1.9 times higher in African-American compared with Caucasian and Hispanic males, respectively (18). Young adult African-American males have higher circulating levels of testosterone than Whites (34-36). Perhaps the high in utero exposure together with higher exposure in young adulthood is related to the increased risk observed in African-American males. Henderson et al. (32) hypothesized that early in utero exposure predisposes the male to this "constitutional development." The high levels of testosterone in adult males have been associated with fat distribution patterns, SHBG, muscle strength, and other factors (35, 37). Although the determinants of the high circulating levels of testosterone are largely unknown, one study suggested that the higher prevalence of abdominal obesity among adult African-American males explained the racial differences in testosterone (36). To our knowledge, factors associated with levels of pregnancy hormones in African-American women have not been explored.
Two sources of variability may limit the ability to observe significant associations: variability in laboratory assays and variability in hormone concentrations across women sampled. We observed substantial laboratory imprecision for some analytes, yet we observed significant differences between groups, and the quality control samples were valuable for interpreting results. The quality control data suggested sporadic, random errors in the laboratory measurements, which would diminish the ability to observe differences between groups. The intraclass correlation coefficients were 60% and 76% for progesterone and prolactin, respectively, perhaps limiting the interpretation of those results. The low intraclass correlation coefficient for DHEAS (<50%) suggests that the results observed for this analyte may be biased towards the null. The laboratory reproducibility data were high for the estradiol and estrone (intraclass correlation coefficients, 97% and 90%, respectively). The large range of estradiol and estrone values, even within gestational age groups, suggests large between-person variability. In an analysis of first and second pregnancies, Bernstein et al. (38) showed that there is larger between person variability than within-person variability in pregnancy hormones. Our data are consistent with their findings. Given the variability in circulating estrogens, perhaps larger studies are needed to evaluate differences across groups. Further research into the determinants of this variation and physiologic implications for tissues of interest are warranted.
The subjects in this study participate in a health care plan that provides prenatal care. Women included in the larger Massachusetts General Hospital study, from which the present study subjects were drawn, donated an early blood sample suggesting that women of varying ethnicities and educational level in this practice seek medical attention early in pregnancy. Thus, it is unlikely that our sample represents an unusual population of minority women who seek medical care early in pregnancy. The participation rate for the Massachusetts General Hospital study is high and evaluation of demographic factors for nonparticipants did not suggest that those included were a biased sample. There may be some differential bias in the ethnic groups that attend the three clinics but evaluation of demographic data did not reveal any obvious bias, and adjustment for the measured variables did not influence our results. There was also no evidence of biased reporting by ethnic group of last menstrual period when compared with ultrasound data used to verify gestational age. This study is unique in having all ethnic groups attending the same health plan, electronic records collected in a standardized fashion, blood samples handled in a centralized processing laboratory, and quality surveillance of laboratory assays available to identify and circumvent some measurement error.
We observed markedly differing circulating hormone concentrations among pregnant women from different ethnic groups. These differences were in accord with the hypothesized vulnerability of developing tissues in utero to hormonal exposures that may influence risk of adult cancers. The observed differences in pregnancy hormones suggests that further research into the determinants of these differences will be important. In addition, further research is warranted for evaluation of the relation of in utero and later cancer risk factors across the life span, particularly those that vary across racial groups.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Received 11/29/04; revised 2/28/05; accepted 3/16/05.
| References |
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expression in normal breast tissue underlies low breast cancer incidence in Japan. Lancet 1999;354:17878.[CrossRef][Medline]
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