Smoking and high-risk mammographic parenchymal patterns: A case-control study

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Abstract

Current smoking was strongly and inversely associated with high-risk patterns, after adjustment for concomitant risk factors. Relative to never smokers, current smokers were significantly less likely to have a high-risk pattern. Similar results were obtained when the analysis was confined to postmenopausal women. Past smoking was not related to the mammographic parenchymal patterns. The overall effect in postmenopausal women lost its significance when adjusted for other risk factors for P2/DY patterns that were found to be significant in the present study, although the results are still strongly suggestive. The present data indicate that adjustment for current smoking status is important when evaluating the relationship between mammographic parenchymal pattern and breast cancer risk. They also indicate that smoking is a prominent potential confounder when analyzing effects of other risk factors such as obesity-related variables. It appears that parenchymal patterns may act as an informative biomarker of the effect of cigarette smoking on breast cancer risk.

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Sala, E., Warren, R., McCann, J., Duffy, S., Luben, R., & Day, N. (2000). Smoking and high-risk mammographic parenchymal patterns: A case-control study. Breast Cancer Research, 2(1), 59–63. https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr29

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