Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study

Background: Long-term insulin exposure has been implicated in breast cancer etiology, but epidemiological evidence remains inconclusive. The aims of this study were to investigate the association of insulin therapy with mammographic density (MD) as an intermediate phenotype for breast cancer and to...

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Main Authors: Borgquist, Signe, Rosendahl, Ann H., Czene, Kamila, Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala, Dorkhan, Mozhgan, Hall, Per, Brand, Judith S.
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Published: BMC 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/22301/
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-018-1026-7
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spelling my.um.eprints.223012019-09-11T09:01:04Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/22301/ Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study Borgquist, Signe Rosendahl, Ann H. Czene, Kamila Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala Dorkhan, Mozhgan Hall, Per Brand, Judith S. R Medicine Background: Long-term insulin exposure has been implicated in breast cancer etiology, but epidemiological evidence remains inconclusive. The aims of this study were to investigate the association of insulin therapy with mammographic density (MD) as an intermediate phenotype for breast cancer and to assess associations with long-term elevated circulating insulin levels using a genetic score comprising 18 insulin-associated variants. Methods: We used data from the KARolinska MAmmography (Karma) project, a Swedish mammography screening cohort. Insulin-treated patients with type 1 (T1D, n = 122) and type 2 (T2D, n = 237) diabetes were identified through linkage with the Prescribed Drug Register and age-matched to 1771 women without diabetes. We assessed associations with treatment duration and insulin glargine use, and we further examined MD differences using non-insulin-treated T2D patients as an active comparator. MD was measured using a fully automated volumetric method, and analyses were adjusted for multiple potential confounders. Associations with the insulin genetic score were assessed in 9437 study participants without diabetes. Results: Compared with age-matched women without diabetes, insulin-treated T1D patients had greater percent dense (8.7% vs. 11.4%) and absolute dense volumes (59.7 vs. 64.7 cm3), and a smaller absolute nondense volume (615 vs. 491 cm3). Similar associations were observed for insulin-treated T2D, and estimates were not materially different in analyses comparing insulin-treated T2D patients with T2D patients receiving noninsulin glucose-lowering medication. In both T1D and T2D, the magnitude of the association with the absolute dense volume was highest for long-term insulin therapy (≥ 5 years) and the long-acting insulin analog glargine. No consistent evidence of differential associations by insulin treatment duration or type was found for percent dense and absolute nondense volumes. Genetically predicted insulin levels were positively associated with percent dense and absolute dense volumes, but not with the absolute nondense volume (percentage difference [95% CI] per 1-SD increase in insulin genetic score = 0.8 [0.0; 1.6], 0.9 [0.1; 1.8], and 0.1 [- 0.8; 0.9], respectively). Conclusions: The consistency in direction of association for insulin treatment and the insulin genetic score with the absolute dense volume suggest a causal influence of long-term increased insulin exposure on mammographic dense breast tissue. BMC 2018 Article PeerReviewed Borgquist, Signe and Rosendahl, Ann H. and Czene, Kamila and Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala and Dorkhan, Mozhgan and Hall, Per and Brand, Judith S. (2018) Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study. Breast Cancer Research, 20 (1). p. 93. ISSN 1465-5411 https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-018-1026-7 doi:10.1186/s13058-018-1026-7
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Borgquist, Signe
Rosendahl, Ann H.
Czene, Kamila
Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala
Dorkhan, Mozhgan
Hall, Per
Brand, Judith S.
Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study
description Background: Long-term insulin exposure has been implicated in breast cancer etiology, but epidemiological evidence remains inconclusive. The aims of this study were to investigate the association of insulin therapy with mammographic density (MD) as an intermediate phenotype for breast cancer and to assess associations with long-term elevated circulating insulin levels using a genetic score comprising 18 insulin-associated variants. Methods: We used data from the KARolinska MAmmography (Karma) project, a Swedish mammography screening cohort. Insulin-treated patients with type 1 (T1D, n = 122) and type 2 (T2D, n = 237) diabetes were identified through linkage with the Prescribed Drug Register and age-matched to 1771 women without diabetes. We assessed associations with treatment duration and insulin glargine use, and we further examined MD differences using non-insulin-treated T2D patients as an active comparator. MD was measured using a fully automated volumetric method, and analyses were adjusted for multiple potential confounders. Associations with the insulin genetic score were assessed in 9437 study participants without diabetes. Results: Compared with age-matched women without diabetes, insulin-treated T1D patients had greater percent dense (8.7% vs. 11.4%) and absolute dense volumes (59.7 vs. 64.7 cm3), and a smaller absolute nondense volume (615 vs. 491 cm3). Similar associations were observed for insulin-treated T2D, and estimates were not materially different in analyses comparing insulin-treated T2D patients with T2D patients receiving noninsulin glucose-lowering medication. In both T1D and T2D, the magnitude of the association with the absolute dense volume was highest for long-term insulin therapy (≥ 5 years) and the long-acting insulin analog glargine. No consistent evidence of differential associations by insulin treatment duration or type was found for percent dense and absolute nondense volumes. Genetically predicted insulin levels were positively associated with percent dense and absolute dense volumes, but not with the absolute nondense volume (percentage difference [95% CI] per 1-SD increase in insulin genetic score = 0.8 [0.0; 1.6], 0.9 [0.1; 1.8], and 0.1 [- 0.8; 0.9], respectively). Conclusions: The consistency in direction of association for insulin treatment and the insulin genetic score with the absolute dense volume suggest a causal influence of long-term increased insulin exposure on mammographic dense breast tissue.
format Article
author Borgquist, Signe
Rosendahl, Ann H.
Czene, Kamila
Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala
Dorkhan, Mozhgan
Hall, Per
Brand, Judith S.
author_facet Borgquist, Signe
Rosendahl, Ann H.
Czene, Kamila
Bhoo-Pathy, Nirmala
Dorkhan, Mozhgan
Hall, Per
Brand, Judith S.
author_sort Borgquist, Signe
title Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study
title_short Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study
title_full Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study
title_fullStr Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study
title_full_unstemmed Long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the Karma study
title_sort long-term exposure to insulin and volumetric mammographic density: observational and genetic associations in the karma study
publisher BMC
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/22301/
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13058-018-1026-7
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