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Abstract
Background: With an
increasing elderly population, the United States will experience an
increased cancer burden in the coming years.
We evaluated associations between anthropometric,
lifestyle, and reproductive factors and risk of breast, ovarian, and
colorectal
cancer in a prospective study of postmenopausal
women with a focus on diagnoses occurring among very elderly women (≥75
years).
Methods: For each cancer
type, we estimated associations with relevant exposures in 2 age bands
(<75 vs. ≥75 years of age). During
22 years of follow-up, 322 ovarian, 1,311 colon,
315 rectal, and 2,664 breast cancers occurred among 37,459
postmenopausal
women (mean age at baseline 62 years, range 55–71
years).
Results: For ovarian
cancer, we identified few significant associations in either age band.
Colon cancer cases had a higher body mass
index and were less likely to report estrogen or
aspirin use than non-cases, yet these associations were consistent in
both
age bands. Few risk factors were identified for
rectal cancer in women of 75 years of age or more. For breast cancer,
notably
different patterns were revealed, with alcohol
consumption associated with risk in the younger group and previous
hysterectomy
associated with risk only in the older group.
Conclusion: These analyses suggest some important differences in risk factors for cancer depending on the age at diagnosis.
Impact: This study
suggests that etiologic differences may exist in cancers occurring in
the very elderly women. The ongoing demographic
shift in the United States provides a strong
rationale for studies evaluating cancer etiology in the elderly. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 22(4); 681–7. ©2013 AACR.
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