首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The Long Island Breast Cancer Study Project: description of a multi-institutional collaboration to identify environmental risk factors for breast cancer
Authors:Gammon Marilie D  Neugut Alfred I  Santella Regina M  Teitelbaum Susan L  Britton Julie A  Terry Mary Beth  Eng Sybil M  Wolff Mary S  Stellman Steven D  Kabat Geoffrey C  Levin Bruce  Bradlow H Leon  Hatch Maureen  Beyea Jan  Camann David  Trent Martin  Senie Ruby T  Garbowski Gail C  Maffeo Carla  Montalvan Pat  Berkowitz Gertrud S  Kemeny Margaret  Citron Marc  Schnabe Freya  Schuss Allan  Hajdu Steven  Vincguerra Vincent  Collman Gwen W  Obrams G Iris
Affiliation:Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7400, USA. gammon@email.unc.edu
Abstract:The Long Island Breast Cancer Study Project is a federally mandated, population-based case-control study to determine whether breast cancer risk among women in the counties of Nassau and Suffolk, NY, is associated with selected environmental exposures, assessed by blood samples, self-reports, and environmental home samples. This report describes the collaborative project's background, rationale, methods, participation rates, and distributions of known risk factors for breast cancer by case-control status, by blood donation, and by availability of environmental home samples. Interview response rates among eligible cases and controls were 82.1% (n = 1,508) and 62.8% (n = 1,556), respectively. Among case and control respondents who completed the interviewer-administered questionnaire, 98.2 and 97.6% self-completed the food frequency questionnaire; 73.0 and 73.3% donated a blood sample; and 93.0 and 83.3% donated a urine sample. Among a random sample of case and control respondents who are long-term residents, samples of dust (83.6 and 83.0%); soil (93.5 and 89.7%); and water (94.3 and 93.9%) were collected. Established risk factors for breast cancer that were found to increase risk among Long Island women include lower parity, late age at first birth, little or no breast feeding, and family history of breast cancer. Factors that were found to be associated with a decreased likelihood that a respondent would donate blood include increasing age and past smoking; factors associated with an increased probability include white or other race, alcohol use, ever breastfed, ever use of hormone replacement therapy, ever use of oral contraceptives, and ever had a mammogram. Long-term residents (defined as 15+ years in the interview home) with environmental home samples did not differ from other long-term residents, although there were a number of differences in risk factor distributions between long-term residents and other participants, as anticipated.
Keywords:breast cancer  environment  case-control study  DDT  epidemiologic methods  hormones  Long Island  organochlorines  PAH  PCBs
本文献已被 PubMed SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号