Abstract
We examined the role of dietary calcium and vitamin D intakes in childhood and throughout adulthood in relation to mammographic density using data from a nationally representative cohort of 1161 women followed up since their birth in 1946. Dietary intakes at the age of 4 years were determined by 24-h recalls and at the ages of 36, 43 and 53 years by 5-day food records. After adjusting for known risk factors and confounders, no evidence of a relationship between dietary calcium or vitamin D intakes and mammographic density approximately at the age of 50 years was found, except for a cross-sectional relationship between dietary calcium intake at the age of 53 years and breast density in women who were post-menopausal at the time of mammography, with those in the top fifth of the distribution of calcium intake having a 0.53 s.d. lower percent breast density than those in the lowest fifth (P-value <0.01 for linear trend). © 2008 Cancer Research.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Mishra, G., McCormack, V., Kuh, D., Hardy, R., Stephen, A., & Dos Santos Silva, I. (2008). Dietary calcium and vitamin D intakes in childhood and throughout adulthood and mammographic density in a British birth cohort. British Journal of Cancer, 99(9), 1539–1543. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6604697
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.