1 / 19

Vitamin D and breast cancer risk: epidemiological evidence

Vitamin D and breast cancer risk: epidemiological evidence. Tom Rohan Dept. of Epidemiology and Population Health Albert Einstein College Of Medicine. Vitamin D & breast cancer - rationale. • Main actions of 1,25(OH) 2 D are receptor-mediated • VDRs present in normal breast tissue

bella
Download Presentation

Vitamin D and breast cancer risk: epidemiological evidence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vitamin D and breast cancer risk: epidemiological evidence Tom Rohan Dept. of Epidemiology and Population Health Albert Einstein College Of Medicine

  2. Vitamin D & breast cancer - rationale • Main actions of 1,25(OH)2D are receptor-mediated • VDRs present in normal breast tissue • 1,25(OH)2D has anti-proliferative effects on & promotes differentiation of breast cancer cells • In MCF-7 cells, vitamin D & analogues: - induce cell cycle arrest & apoptosis - down-regulate ER expression - limit responsiveness to mitogenic effects of 17β- estradiol - limit induction of PR

  3. Vitamin D & breast cancer – sources of epidemiologic evidence • Ecologic studies • Vitamin D and breast density • VDR polymorphisms and breast cancer risk • Circulating vitamin D levels and breast cancer risk • Dietary and supplemental vitamin D intake and risk

  4. Ecologic studies • Several ecologic studies of sunlight/solar radiation exposure & breast cancer incidence/mortality • Synthesis in skin resulting from exposure to sunlight (esp. UV-B) is major source of endogenous production of vitamin D • Few food sources of vitamin D

  5. R = -0.75 p value = 0.001 Gorham, Int J Epidemiol, 1990 Vitamin D and breast cancer – ecologic evidence

  6. Ecologic studies Limitations: • Measurements averaged over individuals • Confounding Hypothesis-generating

  7. Mammographic density

  8. Mammographic density • Extensive dense breast tissue confers 4-5 fold increase in subsequent breast cancer risk • Mammographic density can be modified • Represents a potential biological marker for assessing risk-modifying effects of dietary & supplemental factors

  9. Vitamin D & mammographic density • 3 studies showed inverse association in premenopausal women (2 for vitamin D from foods only; 1 for foods + supplements) • 1 of these showed inverse association in postmenopausal women also (foods only) • All studies reasonably large • All studies cross-sectional • In one study, association independent of sunlight exposure but weakened by adjusting for calcium

  10. Vitamin D Receptor (VDR) • VDR is a nuclear transcription regulating factor • Mediates cell growth & differentiation effects of vitamin D • Expressed in normal & malignant breast cells • Genetic polymorphisms in VDR may affect VDR gene expression & protein function

  11. VDR polymorphisms and breast cancer risk • Fok1, Bsm1, Apa1, Taq1, Poly(A) • Fok1 is functional; • Others in strong LD – functional significance less clear - length polymorphism Poly(A) may affect transcriptional efficiency/stability of VDR mRNA • 14 studies to date – 3 nested case-control studies; others hospital/population-based • Results inconsistent – sample size, selection bias, confounding, differences in extent of LD

  12. Circulating levels and tissue production of vitamin D • Circulating vitamin D levels related to dietary intake and cutaneous synthesis of vitamin D • Active form (1,25(OH)2D) produced by hydroxylation of major circulating form (25(OH)D) • 1,25(OH)2D produced in breast (& kidney, colon, prostate) by 1α hydrox. of 25(OH)D • Extent of production depends on available 25(OH)D • Low circulating 25(OH)D might impair local production of 1,25(OH)2D in breast

  13. Circulating vitamin D levels and breast cancer risk • 25(OH)D: - Case-control study – strong inverse association - Nested case-control – weak inverse association • 1,25(OH)2D: - Case-control study – strong inverse association - Nested case-control study – no association • Bias in retrospective studies • Single measure of 25(OH)D  short-term exposure

  14. Dairy products and breast cancer • Constituents that may increase risk: - total and saturated fat - contaminants in milk (e.g., pesticides) - growth factors (e.g., IGF-I) • Constituents that may decrease risk: - conjugated linoleic acid - calcium & vitamin D • ~50 studies of dairy product intake and breast cancer risk – results inconsistent

  15. Dietary and supplemental vitamin D intake and breast cancer risk • 10 studies – 5 case-control; 5 cohort •Diet in adolescence: - 2 cohort studies – results null - 1 case-control study - inverse association with use of vitamin D supplements (& sunlight exposure) between ages 10-19 and 20-29

  16. Dietary and supplemental vitamin D intake and breast cancer risk •Diet in adulthood – case-control studies mostly null – cohort studies: - John (1999) – solar radiation/dietary intake –  risk - Shin (2002) –  risk in premenop. women for total/dietary vit. D, & supp. vit D in those with low dietary intake - no assoc. in postmenop. women - McCullough (2005) – postmenop. women – no. assoc. with total/dietary vit. D -  risk with dietary vit. D in those in areas with low UV exposure

  17. Summary of current evidence • Ecologic studies – inverse association • Breast density – inverse association • VDR polymorphisms – inconclusive • Circulating vitamin D levels – inconclusive • Vitamin D intake - inconclusive

  18. Conclusions • Establishing independent association for vit. D intake from observational epi. studies challenging • Few food sources of vit. D/UV-B major source • Need studies that: - use validated methods to quantify intensity & duration of sunlight exposure - assess other factors that influence vit. D status - skin pigmentation, sunscreen/protective clothing, medical conditions, medications

  19. Conclusions (cont.) • Comprehensive assessment of vit D. status also requires assessment of determinants of circulating 25(OH)D & 1,25(OH)2D, including: • glycemic index – may affect cellular uptake of calcium • retinol – can antagonize vit. D actions • BMI – inversely assoc. with serum 25(OH)D – deposition in fat • Associations may vary by VDR genotype.

More Related