Abstract
PURPOSE:
The
aim of the study was to examine the potential association between a
history of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and risk of epithelial
ovarian cancer or ovarian borderline tumors.
METHODS:
In a
population-based case-control study in Denmark, we included 554 women
with invasive ovarian cancer, 202 with ovarian borderline tumors, and
1,564 controls aged 35-79 years. The analyses were performed in multiple
logistic regression models.
RESULTS:
We found a
significantly increased risk of ovarian borderline tumors among women
with a history of PID (OR = 1.50; 95 % CI 1.08-2.08) but no apparent
association between PID and risk of invasive ovarian cancer (OR = 0.83;
95 % CI 0.65-1.05). We found no effect of age at time of first PID or
time since first PID on the risk for either condition.
CONCLUSION:
Our
results suggest that a history of PID is associated with an increased
risk of ovarian borderline tumors, which may support the hypothesis that
inflammation is an etiological factor. The lack of an association
between previous PID and invasive ovarian cancer may indicate an
etiological difference between ovarian borderline tumors and invasive
ovarian cancer. However, an important limitation of the study is the use
of self-reported PID.
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