Abstract
Three breast cancer risk factors were evaluated in terms of their interactions with radiation dose in a case-control interview study of Japanese A-bomb survivors. Cases and controls were matched on age at the time of the hombings and radiation dose, and dose-related risk was estimated from cohort rather than case-control data. Each factor—age at first full-term pregnancy, number of deliveries, and cumulative lactation period summed over births—conformed reasonably well to a multiplicative interaction model with radiation dose (the additive interactive model, in which the absolute excess risk associated with a factor is assumed to be independent of radiation dose, was rejected). An important implication of the finding is that early age at first full-term pregnancy, multiple births, and lengthy cumulative lactation are all protective against radiation-related, as well as baseline, breast cancer. Analyses by age at exposure to radiation suggest that, among women exposed to radiation in childhood or adolescence, a first full-term pregnancy at an early agefollowing exposure may be protective against radiation-related risk.
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The Radiation Effects Research Foundation (formerly the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission) was established in April 1975 as a private nonprofit Japanese Foundation, supported equally by the Government of Japan through the Ministry of Health and Welfare, and the Government of the United States through the National Academy of Sciences under contract with the Department of Energy. The present work was performed as part of a collaboration between RERF and the US National Cancer Institute.
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Land, C.E., Hayakawa, N., Machado, S.G. et al. A case-control interview study of breast cancer among Japanese A-bomb survivors. II. Interactions with radiation dose. Cancer Causes Control 5, 167–176 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01830263
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01830263