Abstract
Whilst
previous studies have reported that higher body-mass index (BMI)
increases a woman's risk of developing ovarian cancer, associations for
the different histological subtypes have not been well defined. As the
prevalence of obesity has increased dramatically, and classification of
ovarian histology has improved in the last decade, we sought to examine
the association in a pooled analysis of recent studies participating in
the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium. We evaluated the association
between BMI (recent, maximum, and in young adulthood) and ovarian cancer
risk using original data from 15 case-control studies (13,548 cases,
17,913 controls). We combined study-specific adjusted odds ratios (ORs)
using a random-effects model. We further examined the associations by
histological subtype, menopausal status and post-menopausal hormone use.
High BMI (all time-points) was associated with increased risk. This was
most pronounced for borderline serous (recent BMI: pooled OR=1.24 per
5kg/m2; 95%CI 1.18-1.30), invasive endometrioid (1.17; 1.11-1.23) and
invasive mucinous (1.19; 1.06-1.32) tumours. There was no association
with serous invasive cancer overall (0.98; 0.94-1.02), but increased
risks for low grade serous invasive tumours (1.13, 1.03-1.25) and in
pre-menopausal women (1.11; 1.04-1.18). Among post-menopausal women, the
associations did not differ between HRT users and non-users. Whilst
obesity appears to increase risk of the less common histological
subtypes of ovarian cancer, it does not increase risk of high grade
invasive serous cancers, and reducing BMI is therefore unlikely to
prevent the majority of ovarian cancer deaths. Other modifiable factors
must be identified to control this disease.
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