Obesity in breast cancer-what is the risk factor?
Obesity in breast cancer-what is the risk factor?
Environmental factors influence breast cancer incidence and progression. High body mass index (BMI) is associated with increased risk of post-menopausal breast cancer and with poorer outcome in those with a history of breast cancer. High BMI is generally interpreted as excess adiposity (overweight or obesity) and the World Cancer Research Fund judged that the associations between BMI and incidence of breast cancer were due to body fatness. Although BMI is the most common measure used to characterise body composition, it cannot distinguish lean mass from fat mass, or characterise body fat distribution, and so individuals with the same BMI can have different body composition. In particular, the relation between BMI and lean or fat mass may differ between people with or without disease. The question therefore arises as to what aspect or aspects of body composition are causally linked to the poorer outcome of breast cancer patients with high BMI. This question is not addressed in the literature. Most studies have used BMI, without discussion of its shortcomings as a marker of body composition, leading to potentially important misinterpretation. In this article we review the different measurements used to characterise body composition in the literature, and how they relate to breast cancer risk and prognosis. Further research is required to better characterise the relation of body composition to breast cancer.
breast cancer, body fatness, risk factor, body composition, fat mass, fat free mass, prognosis, intervention
705-720
James, F.R.
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Wootton, S.
bf47ef35-0b33-4edb-a2b0-ceda5c475c0c
Jackson, A.
98cb176a-f127-44dd-a549-ef650ce9c2fc
Wiseman, M.
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Copson, E.R.
a94cdbd6-f6e2-429d-a7c0-462c7da0e92b
Cutress, R.I.
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
April 2015
James, F.R.
138884c4-d50e-44ee-908c-e37bae62c94e
Wootton, S.
bf47ef35-0b33-4edb-a2b0-ceda5c475c0c
Jackson, A.
98cb176a-f127-44dd-a549-ef650ce9c2fc
Wiseman, M.
d0ea203b-11e7-4e81-97dd-f3eefe10ab8e
Copson, E.R.
a94cdbd6-f6e2-429d-a7c0-462c7da0e92b
Cutress, R.I.
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
James, F.R., Wootton, S., Jackson, A., Wiseman, M., Copson, E.R. and Cutress, R.I.
(2015)
Obesity in breast cancer-what is the risk factor?
European Journal of Cancer, 51 (6), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ejca.2015.01.057).
(PMID:25747851)
Abstract
Environmental factors influence breast cancer incidence and progression. High body mass index (BMI) is associated with increased risk of post-menopausal breast cancer and with poorer outcome in those with a history of breast cancer. High BMI is generally interpreted as excess adiposity (overweight or obesity) and the World Cancer Research Fund judged that the associations between BMI and incidence of breast cancer were due to body fatness. Although BMI is the most common measure used to characterise body composition, it cannot distinguish lean mass from fat mass, or characterise body fat distribution, and so individuals with the same BMI can have different body composition. In particular, the relation between BMI and lean or fat mass may differ between people with or without disease. The question therefore arises as to what aspect or aspects of body composition are causally linked to the poorer outcome of breast cancer patients with high BMI. This question is not addressed in the literature. Most studies have used BMI, without discussion of its shortcomings as a marker of body composition, leading to potentially important misinterpretation. In this article we review the different measurements used to characterise body composition in the literature, and how they relate to breast cancer risk and prognosis. Further research is required to better characterise the relation of body composition to breast cancer.
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 January 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 March 2015
Published date: April 2015
Keywords:
breast cancer, body fatness, risk factor, body composition, fat mass, fat free mass, prognosis, intervention
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 383782
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383782
ISSN: 0959-8049
PURE UUID: b0e9beae-ce2f-4ec8-97ad-6df2927f0d63
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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2015 12:07
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 21:48
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Author:
F.R. James
Author:
A. Jackson
Author:
M. Wiseman
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