Disentangling the relationships of body mass index and circulating sex hormone concentrations in mammographic density using Mendelian randomization

Apr 23, 2024Breast cancer research and treatment

How Body Weight and Sex Hormone Levels May Relate to Breast Tissue Density

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Abstract

Genetically predicted BMI was positively associated with non-dense area (β = 1.79) and inversely associated with dense area (β = -0.37) in up to 14,000 women.

  • Higher genetically predicted BMI is linked to an increase in non-dense breast tissue.
  • Increased BMI is associated with a decrease in dense breast tissue.
  • There is weak evidence suggesting that circulating testosterone may inversely affect dense breast tissue.
  • Genetically predicted estradiol concentrations show a potential inverse association with non-dense breast tissue.
  • Results regarding circulating sex hormone concentrations and mammographic density phenotypes are inconsistent.

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