Studies on maternal smoking in relation to oral cleft defects have yielded inconsistent findings, with results ranging from no association to sixfold increases in risk. The authors examined this ...relation in a case-control study conducted in Boston, Massachusetts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and the state of Iowa during the years 1983-1987, in which mothers of malformed infants were interviewed within 6 months after delivery about prenatal events and exposures. Maternal cigarette smoking during pregnancy for 400 infants with cleft lip with or without cleft palate and for 215 infants with cleft palate alone was compared with that for 2,710 infants with other malformations (controls). Relative risks (and 95% confidence intervals) were estimated for smokers of 1-14, 15-24, and greater than or equal to 25 cigarettes per day relative to never smokers; the respective estimates for cleft lip with or without cleft palate were 1.2 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.9-1.6), 1.4 (95% CI 1.0-2.1), and 0.7 (95% CI 0.3-1.6), and for cleft palate alone, estimates were 1.0 (95% CI 0.7-1.5), 0.9 (95% CI 0.5-1.5), and 0.8 (95% CI 0.3-2.2). Relative risks were also close to unity for case subgroups divided according to the presence or absence of an associated malformation. Multivariate control of several potential confounders did not alter these estimates. Based on this large series of cases, maternal smoking during pregnancy does not appear to increase the risk of oral clefts.
Recent epidemiologic studies, most of them in predominantly White populations, have suggested that long duration of oral contraceptive (OC) use may increase the risk of breast cancer at young ages. ...We assessed the relationship of OC use to the risk of breast cancer in African-American women aged 25 to 59 years, using interview data from a multipurpose hospital-based case-control study. Five hundred and twenty-four cases hospitalized for invasive breast cancer were compared with 1,021 controls with nonmalignant conditions unrelated to OC use. Relative risks (RR) and 95 percent confidence intervals (CI) were estimated relative to a reference category of use for less than 12 months; potential confounders were controlled by multiple logistic regression analysis. Among women under age 45, three or more years of OC use was associated with an increased risk of breast cancer: the RR estimate was 2.8 (CI = 1.5-5.0) for three to four years of use, and declined to 1.5 (CI = 08.3.0) for 10 or more years of use. Recency and timing of use did not explain the observed association. Among women aged 45 to 59, OC use was associated with little or no increase in risk: the RR estimate for three or more years of use was 1.3 (CI = 0.7-2.4). The findings add to the evidence from studies of White women and a recent study of Black women which have suggested an increased risk of breast cancer at young ages for moderate or long duration use of OCs.
The relation of oral contraceptive use to the risk of breast cancer was evaluated in a case-control study of women under the age of 70 years, conducted in Toronto, Canada, from 1982 through 1986. A ...total of 607 breast cancer cases identified in a cancer hospital were compared with 1,214 controls matched to the cases on neighborhood and decade of age. Information on oral contraceptive use and risk factors for breast cancer was collected in home interviews. Conditional logistic regression was used to control multiple confounding factors. For women aged 40-69 years (527 cases, 1,054 controls), the results suggest that oral contraceptive use does not increase the risk of breast cancer. Multivariate relative risk estimates were close to or below 1.0 for long durations of use overall and in various categories of parity status and other factors. For women under the age of 40 years, the data were sparse (80 cases, 160 controls). Although there were some elevated relative risk estimates, most were not statistically significant, and there were no consistent patterns across duration of use. The present data add to the body of evidence that indicates that oral contraceptive use does not adversely affect the risk of breast cancer in older women; the data are inadequate to clarify the effect in younger women.
Nonepithelial ovarian cancers are rare, and little is known about their etiology. Of particular interest are the effects of oral contraceptive use and pregnancy, both of which are associated with ...large decreases in risk for epithelial ovarian cancer. We examined the risk factors for nonepithelial ovarian tumors by combining data from four case-control studies conducted in the United States. We compared personal characteristics of 38 germ cell cases and 45 stromal cases, respectively, with 1,142 and 2,617 general population controls. All subjects were over age 18 years. For germ cell tumors, there was a weak negative association with parity but no consistent pattern of decreasing risk with increasing parity. In contrast, relative to nulligravid women, gravid nulliparous women were at increased risk of developing a germ cell cancer odds ratio (OR) = 4.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.2-18.6. The use of oral contraceptives was also associated with elevated risk (OR = 2.0, 95% CI = 0.77-5.1); however, no clear trends in risk were observed. For stromal tumors, oral contraceptive use was associated with decreased risk (OR = 0.37, 95% CI = 0.16-0.83), whereas pregnancy was associated with a small elevation in risk. A trend of increasing risk with increasing age at first term pregnancy was observed, with an odds ratio of 3.6 (95% CI = 1.0-12.5) for a first birth after age 29 years. Risk factors for nonepithelial ovarian cancers do not appear to parallel each other or those for epithelial ovarian cancer.
The relation of coffee consumption to the risk of nonfatal first myocardial infarction in men under 55 years of age was assessed in a hospital-based case-control study conducted from 1980 to 1983 in ...hospitals in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New York: 1,873 men with first nonfatal myocardial infarctions were compared with 1,161 controls admitted for conditions unrelated to coffee ingestion. After allowance for major risk factors for myocardial infarction, the relative risk estimate for recent consumption of caffeine-containing coffee increased with increasing level of daily intake, from 1.4 for one to two cups per day to 1.6 for three to four cups, 1.8 for five to nine cups, and 2.9 for greater than or equal to 10 cups, relative to consumption of no coffee (p less than 0.001 for trend). The association was apparent in each age group and in both smokers and nonsmokers. For those who drank decaffeinated coffee only, on the basis of small numbers, there was a suggestion of an increased risk among men who had consumed at least five cups daily for less than five years but not among those who had drunk this amount for at least five years; whether the apparent association among the shorter-term drinkers was due to previous consumption of caffeine-containing coffee could not be determined. The findings suggest that caffeine-containing coffee increases the risk of myocardial infarction and that men who drink at least five cups daily may increase their risk by about twofold or more.
Intact nuclei derived from poorly or highly liver-metastatic murine large-cell lymphoma cell line RAW117 were digested to discrete subchromatin deoxyribonucleoprotein/ribonucleoprotein (DNP/RNP) ...complexes with Msp-I. The DNP/RNP complexes were composed of DNP/RNPs which were derived from the DNP/RNP complexes by incubation in the presence or absence of DNase-I and subsequent isolation by two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), electroelution from the gel, and removal of SDS. Approximately 450 DNP/RNPs in the two-dimensional gels corresponding to discrete spots or in some cases streaks were analyzed for the presence of v-abl, p53, c-neu, c-H-ras, beta-casein, 18s rDNA, and mu-chain immunoglobulin genes using a hybridization technique. Ten DNP/RNP complexes contained tightly associated p53 DNA, whereas six contained c- or v-abl, four contained mu-chain gene, two contained c-H-ras, one contained dot-blot beta-casein, two contained 18s rDNA, and c-neu was found in one of the DNP/RNPs. The DNP/RNPs were also analyzed for in vitro RNA polymerase and primase activities. To assess the potential transcription abilities of the isolated DNP/RNPs, individual DNP/RNPs or DNP/RNP mixtures (reconstituted after SDS-PAGE separation) were examined for RNA polymerase initiation and synthesis. When RNA products were formed, these were purified by extracellulose chromatography and used as back-hybridization probes for the genes of interest. The RNA products were also analyzed by RNA gel electrophoresis. RNA formation was inhibitable by actinomycin D, and the RNAs formed ranged in size from approximately 80 kbp to approximately 1 kbp. By mixing various DNP/RNP complexes together, different patterns of RNA synthesis were found. For example, one DNP/RNP of M(r) approximately 140,000, isoelectric point (pl) approximately 5.8 synthesized a high molecular weight RNA in vitro that hybridized with beta-casein cDNA, but beta-casein is not expressed in RAW117 cells, suggesting that the silencing of the beta-casein gene was negated by isolation of the DNP/RNP. Mixing this DNP/RNP with two other specific DNP/RNPs again inhibited the synthesis of beta-casein RNA, suggesting that interactions between DNP/RNP complexes can result in differential RNA expression or regulation of RNA polymerases in vitro.
Nucleosome cores were digested with alpha-chymotrypsin until histone H3 was degraded to a partial histone, CP1. As we reported previously, cleavage occurred at leucine 20 to H3 and resulted in an ...increase in circular dichroism between 265 to 285 nm. Some modest core unfolding was also observed as determined by a small decrease in the sedimentation coefficient. Studies reported here deal with the analysis of core secondary structure and subsequent perturbation caused by treatment with alpha-chymotrypsin. Raman spectroscopy indicated that chymotryptic treatment promoted a change in the conformational environment of a population of core histone tyrosines. In addition, a shift from B-form to an intermediate B- or A-form was observed for core DNA. High-resolution thermal denaturation was used to determine alterations in the stabilization of core DNA related to perturbation of the core histones. Brief chymotryptic treatment indicated changes in both pre-melt and irreversible transitions.
Because of evidence of reduced estrogen excretion in the urine of women who smoke cigarettes and evidence linking estrogen levels to the risk of cancer of the female reproductive system, we evaluated ...the risk of endometrial cancer in relation to cigarette use in a hospital-based case-control study of 510 women with endometrial cancer (cases) and 727 women with other cancers (controls). The rate-ratio estimate (relative risk) for current smokers as compared with women who had never smoked was 0.7 (95 per cent confidence interval, 0.5 to 1.0), and for former smokers the estimate was 0.9 (0.6 to 1.2). For women currently smoking 25 or more cigarettes per day, the rate-ratio estimate was 0.5 (0.3 to 0.8). The effect of current smoking of at least 25 cigarettes per day appeared to be confined to postmenopausal women, among whom the estimate was 0.5 (0.2 to 0.9). Among premenopausal women the estimate was 0.9 (0.4 to 2.2), but the difference between these two estimates could have been due to chance. The data suggest that women who smoke heavily may have a lower risk of endometrial cancer than nonsmokers. The present findings do not have direct public health importance since cigarettes, overall, have serious deleterious effects. However, if these results are confirmed, elucidation of the underlying mechanisms whereby smoking reduces the risk would be of interest and might be useful in the development of strategies for preventing endometrial cancer.
Risk factors for breast cancer in black women Schatzkin, A; Palmer, J R; Rosenberg, L ...
JNCI : Journal of the National Cancer Institute,
02/1987, Letnik:
78, Številka:
2
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Risk factors for breast cancer were examined in black women in a hospital-based case-control study of 529 black women with breast cancer and 589 controls. Late age at menarche was associated with a ...reduced risk of breast cancer. Women having 5 or more children had a reduced risk relative to that of women with fewer or no children. Late age at first birth was associated with an elevated risk of breast cancer. Among postmenopausal black women, obesity as measured by body mass index (BMI) was associated with an increased risk; among premenopausal women, there was no association of breast cancer with BMI. Women whose menopause occurred at or after age 50 were at increased risk relative to those whose menopause occurred earlier. There was no association between number of years of education and breast cancer in black women. History of benign breast disease and history of breast cancer in mother or sisters both were risk factors. The risk factor profile for breast cancer in black women was similar to that observed in whites.
Radiolysis of aerated CH3OH produced no peroxide until approximates 0.5 wt % H2O was added; the G(H2O2) then jumped from practically zero to the plateau value of 2.8. Several possible explanations of ...this phenomenon are considered. Finally, the H2O addition did not affect the production of ethylene glycol (G =0), HCO2H (1.8 ± 0.2), and CH2O (10 ± 1).