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[CANCER RESEARCH 38, 4021-4024, 0008-5472/78/0038-OOOOS02.00 November 1978] Menstrual Cycle Patterns and Breast Cancer Risk Factors1 Robert B. Wallace,2 Barry M. Sherman, Judy A. Bean, James P. Leeper, and Alan E. Treloar Departments of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health [P. B. W.,J.A. B.,J. P. L.] and Internal Medicine [B. M.S.], University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27514 [A. E. T.¡ Abstract Using a data set of women who longitudinally recorded menstrual and reproductive events, we examined men strual cycle characteristics in relationship to early and late menarche, early and late menopause, and deferred parity, three variables epidemiologically related to breast cancer incidence. Women with late onset of menarche had longer and more variable cycles in the 10 years after menarche than did those with early onset. Women with late onset of menopause had longer and more variable cycles in the premenopausal interval than did those with early onset. Cumulative fertility in women after marriage did not differ according to cycle length and variance. Late menopause may be a breast cancer risk factor due to relative estrogen excess and progesterone lack as re flected in longer, more varied cycle patterns. Observed cycle differences between women with early and late menarche await further study of the endocrine physiology of the menstrual cycle in those groups. arche and late menopause might have a longer or exagger ated phase of irregular menstrual cycles and thus a longer time of relative estrogen excess. We also theorized that the association of late age at first pregnancy with increased breast cancer risk was at least in part a manifestation of involuntary infertility that might be related to abnormalities of menstrual cycle length and, by inference, inadequate luteal-phase progesterone production. With some evidence that relative estrogen excess in the face of inadequate progesterone is related to the pathogen esis of hormone-responsive neoplasms (3) and the pre sumption that this abnormal physiological state could be inferred from alteration in menstrual cycle patterns, we hypothesized that early menarche, late menopause, and late first parity would be associated with such an increased frequency of menstrual cycle abnormalities. If this held true, not only might knowledge of pathogenesis improve, but also women at special risk of breast cancer might be identified according to cycle patterns for rigorous early detection programs. Introduction Methods A large body of evidence relates reproductive function and reproductive hormones to breast cancer. In particular, epidemiological studies have repeatedly demonstrated al tered breast cancer risk related to menarchal and menopausal age and to age at first parity (3). While each of these represents a major event in a woman's reproductive life and is accompanied by an important change in the endocrine environment, there has been no interpretation that explains the risk factors in terms of concomitant hormonal changes. Knowledge of the mechanism by which endocrine events alter breast cancer risk would contribute greatly to our understanding of the underlying pathogenesis of the dis ease. In 1974 we formulated an hypothesis attempting to ex plain some of the epidemiologically derived breast cancer risk factors in terms of altered reproductive physiology (5). We had observed that insufficient corpus luteum progester one production was a common manifestation of disordered follicular maturation at several stages of reproductive life and in some infertile women (7). These disorders resulted in a hormonal environment of estrogen sufficiency in the absence of the regular, cyclic increases in progesterone that occur during each normal menstrual cycle. The years immediately following menarche and immediately prior to menopause are times when menstrual cycles are most irregular (10). We suggested that women with early men1 Presented at the John E. Fogarty International Center Conference on Hormones and Cancer, March 29 to 31, 1978, Bethesda, Md. Supported by Grant CA-15104 from the National Cancer Institute. 2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed. NOVEMBER To examine the relationship between abnormal cycle patterns and age at menarche, menopause, and first parity, we utilized the data set of the Menstrual and Reproductive History Research Program (10). Beginning in 1934 Dr. A. E. Treloar enrolled female students from the University of Minnesota to record menstrual cycle intervals and repro ductive events through life. Participating women were given calendars on which they noted all days of vaginal bleeding and reported related contraceptive, reproductive, and med ical events. Many returned information each year until menopause. In addition, many daughters of the original subjects were enrolled from the time of menarche. To date, nearly 5000 women have participated, although some dropped out and others have significant gaps in the conti nuity of their records. The results below include data collected through 1975 from all women with sufficient menstrual and reproductive information for the stage of reproductive life under study. Subjects taking oral contraceptives or with any gynecolog ical surgery that might interfere with cycle patterns were excluded from analysis. Results Median 2-year mean cycle length and variance were examined for the immediate postmenarchal years of women with different ages at menarche (Chart 1). In the first 2 years after menarche, there was a consistent positive association between age at menarche and mean cycle length (p = 0.01, analysis of variance). This association was lost between 3 1978 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 17, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. 4021 R. B. Wallace et al. and 10 years after menarche, except for the late-menarche group, which had consistently longer mean cycles for 10 years after menarche. Table 1 shows the specific findings for cycle means and standard deviations in the 2-year interval after menarche. The group with menarche at age 15 to 16 years also showed the greatest cycle variance over the 10-year study interval. The relationship between age at natural menopause and mean cycle length during the years immediately preceding menopause was examined in Chart 2. There was a signifi cantly positive correlation between age at menopause and both cycle length and standard deviation in the 2 years prior to menopause (p = 0.03). This relationship held in the third and fourth years prior to menopause (p = 0.02), although the magnitude of the differences was considerably less and no relationship was found 5 years or more before menopause. Table 2 shows specific findings of cycle length and variance in the 2 years prior to menopause according to menopausal age. To determine whether fertility is deferred in association with unusual cycles, we contrasted the cumulative propor tion of subjects becoming pregnant in the first 5 years of marriage according to cycle length and variance during the 2 years prior to marriage. Women who conceived prior to marriage and those reporting the use of any contraception were eliminated from the analysis. For women married between ages 20 and 24, there was no relationship between cycle characteristics before mar riage and cumulative proportion becoming pregnant, which was about 90% within 5 years of marriage (Table 3). For so 70 Q. Q 60 £ t 50 S 40 <JJ X O 5 30 I 20 0 9-10 7-8 5-6 3-4 Years Prior to Menopause Chart 2. Mean menstrual cycle length prior to menopause according to age of menopause. Table 2 Mean cycle length and standard deviation in the 2 years prior to menopause, according to menopausal age Menopausal age (yr)s 44 45-46 50-54 55 +No. of sub jects15 (days)56.9 length 89 164 18Cycle 60.5 ±48.1 68.2 ±54.0 77.9 ±64.0 ±46.5" Mean ±S.D. Table 3 Cumulative proportion of women pregnant according to mean cycle length and standard years before marriage Marriage age was 20 to 24 years. ofsub after marriage deviation in the 2 pregnant at following marriage1yr0.540.420.520.450.430.522yr0.850.630.670.6 times after jects26174215813825Proportion yr0.960.880.900.840.910.885yr Meancyclelength (days)£2627-3536+Mean o S.D.(days)s22-67 cycle s I" 30 +No. 29 3-4 5-6 7-8 Years After Menarche Chart 1. Median 2-year mean cycle length after menarche according to age at menarche. Table 1 Mean menstrual cycle length and standard deviation according age at menarche in the 2-year interval after menarche Age at men (yr)10-1112131415-16" arche of sub length jects21871096021Cycle (days)34.1 ±11.4°35.2 14.636.4 ± 13.138.6 ± 16.548.4 ± ±23.0 S.D.4022No. Mean ± to women married between ages 25 and 29, there was a trend toward a decreased cumulative pregnancy rate among those whose premarriage mean cycle lengths were less than 27 or more than 34 days (Chart 3; Table 4). These results were not statistically significantly different from the 5-year pregnancy rate among women with premarriage mean cycle lengths of 27 to 34 days (p = 0.1), and no difference was found in cumulative pregnancy rate accord ing to premarital cycle standard deviation. Discussion In women of mature reproductive age, menstruation is a consequence of an orderly process of follicular maturation, ovulation, corpus luteum function, and regression, events CANCER RESEARCH VOL. Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 17, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. 38 Cycle Patterns and Breast Cancer Risk was frequently absent from the irregular cycles of postmenarchal and premenopausal women (11). Detailed character ization of the hormonal changes during menstrual cycles in postmenarchal and perimenopausal women by radioimmunoassay of pituitary and ovarian hormones showed that the absent fluctuation of the basal body temperature was in deed associated with subnormal corpus luteum progester I 0.6 one secretion (8, 9, 12). Other studies had demonstrated i inadequate corpus luteum function in normal-length or 05 short menstrual cycles occurring at regular intervals in 0 young women some of whom were infertile, and inferences 12345 Years After Marriage of inadequate corpus luteum function had been made in infertile regularly menstruating women based on hormonal Chart 3. Cumulative proportion of women pregnant after marriagi ac cording to mean cycle length prior to marriage. studies or the findings of premenstrual endometrial biopsy (1, 2, 6). Inadequate corpus luteum function has also been Table 4 described in some women with features of the polycystic Cumulative proportion of women pregnant after marriage ovarian syndrome, a disorder associated with infertility and according to mean cycle length and standard deviation in the 2 increased breast cancer risk (3, 5). In all of these situations years before marriage when the luteal-phase plasma progesterone concentration Marriage age was 25 to 29 years. was subnormal, estradici concentrations in the range were pregnant at following observed in menstruating women. marriage1yr0.500.500.620.490.510.502yr0.610.760.620.750.740.553yr0.710.850.760.840.810.824 times after ofc We did discern differences in cycle characteristics in ih-ouujects28170216912622Proportion i women with early versus late menarche and menopause, yr0.790.900.760.880.870.825yr0.790.910.760.880.880.92 and the finding of increased cycle variability in women with Meancyclelength later menopause was consistent with our hormonal hypoth (days)s 2627-3536 esis. In related studies we showed that the irregular vaginal bleeding in perimenopausal women was the result of irreg +Mean ular maturation of residual ovarian follicles (8). In many cases menstruation was preceded by only a few days of S.D.(days)<22-6>6No. cycle limited progesterone secretion or in some instances by a rise and fall of estradiol unaccompanied by a detectable increase in progesterone, examples of anovulatory bleed ing. Late menopausal age is also a risk factor for endome trial cancer which may also be related to persistent estrogen accompanied by well-defined hormonal changes (4, 7). stimulation. Our data clearly showed a relationship between age at Longitudinal studies of menstrual cycle length and variabil ity have shown the greatest stability during the middle years menarche and menstrual cycle length and variance; how of reproductive life and the most variation after menarche ever, it was opposite to the direction predicted. Women with early menarche established a pattern of regular cycle and before menopause (10). Analysis of the data collected intervals more promptly than did women with late men in the Menstrual and Reproductive History Research Pro arche, who as a group had persistently longer and more gram enabled us to determine whether there were differ ences in menstrual cycle patterns in women with early variable cycles for up to 10 years after menarche. Thus, versus late menarche, early versus late menopause, and while cycle differences exist between women with early and early versus late age at first parity. We proposed that late menarche, interpretation of this observation requires some modification of our hypothesis. Since there is appar differences observed between these groups could be cor ently no correlation between age at menarche and meno related with independently determined hormonal character istics and inferences made regarding the endocrine patho- pause, one possibility is that women with early menarche physiology of the breast cancer risk that accompanies early have a greater number of menstrual cycles and thus a menarche, late menopause, and late age at first parity. greater cumulative hormone exposure. More specifically, we predicted that a situation of relative In this study our hormonal hypothesis was testable only estrogen sufficiency and absent or inadequate, regular as far as luteal-phase insufficiency might be manifest by progesterone secretion would be associated with early some alteration in menstrual cycle length or variance, and menarche, late menopause, and involuntary infertility (i.e., it is possible that such defects occur in women with entirely late age at first pregnancy) and that they might be indicated regular menstrual histories. By longitudinal analysis of by the demonstration of abnormal cycle length and variance basal body temperature records, Vollman (11) has shown that of a woman's first 20 menstrual cycles 35% are associ (5). That hypothesis was based on several observations. ated with monophasic records indicating poor corpus lu When determination of basal body temparatures was added teum function. This incidence decreased to 25% in the to studies of menstrual cycle length, the thermal shift, an second 20 cycles and to 10% in the third 20 cycles. Thus increase of about 0.3°Cor more in the basal temperature women with early menarche not only have earlier and more that occurs during the second half of the menstrual cycle, prolonged exposure to sex steroids but also may well have rI °7 NOVEMBER 1978 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 17, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. 4023 ñ.B. Wallace et al. cycles with an abnormal estrogen-progesterone relation ship. We cannot determine from our data whether the proportion of cycles that are associated with deficient corpus luteum function differs in women with early and late menarche is known. While one suggestive trend was noted, in general, study subjects did not differ in cumulative proportion in becoming pregnant after marriage according to prior cycle length or variability characteristics. We did not find information re garding cycle length that would support our hypothesis or that would indicate an abnormality in reproductive function preceding pregnancy. It is possible, however, that our methods and sample size were not large or sensitive enough to detect relative infertility in the study cohort. Clearly, fertility is to a considerable extent determined by cultural and social characteristics as well as any of the biological or constitutional factors that may act as facilita tors or impediments to conception. In addition, we had no way of discerning that proportion of infertility attributable to male factors. In this analysis we have examined only simple measures of cycle patterns, means, and variance. It is possible that a single or a small number of episodes of prolonged amenorrhea may be of more pathophysiological importance than are deviations from average cycle length of, for example, 1 week. In addition to these studies concerning the association of menstrual cycle alterations with the various breast cancer risk factors, we are currently attempting to recontact the members of the study cohort to determine whether breast cancer occurred. We will then conduct an empirical analy sis of breast cancer risk according to various cycle patterns. Should there be an association of patterns of menstrual cycle length with increased breast cancer risk, the possibil 4024 ity of identifying groups for rigorous early detection may be quite realistic. Acknowledgments We are grateful to Dr. Stanley G. Korenman for his helpful suggestions and discussion. References 1. Dodson, k. S., MacNaughton, M. C., and Coutis, J. R. T. Infertility in Women with Apparently Ovulatory Cycles. Brit. J. Obstet. Gynaecol., 82: 615-624, 1975. 2. Jones. G. S. The Luteal Phase Defect. Fertility Sterility. 27: 351-356, 1976. 3. MacMahon, B.. Cole. P.. and Brown. J. Etiology of Human Breast Cancer-A Review. J. Nati. Cancer Inst., 50. 21-42, 1973. 4. Ross, G.T.. Cargille, C. M., Lipsett, M. B., Rayford, P. I., Marshall, J. R., Strott, C. A., and Rodbard, D. Pituitary and Gonadal Hormones in Women during Spontaneous and Induced Ovulatory Cycles. Recent Progr. Hormone Res., 26. 1-62, 1970. 5. Sherman, B. M., and Korenman, S. G. Inadequate Corpus Luteum Function: A Pathophysiological Interpretation of Human Breast Cancer Epidemiology. Cancer, 33: 1306-1312, 1974. 6. Sherman, B. M., and Korenman, S. G. Measurement of Plasma LH, FSH, Estradici and Progesterone in Disorders of the Human Menstrual Cycle: The Short Luteal Phase. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.. 38: 89-93, 1974. 7. Sherman, B. M., and Korenman, S. G. Hormonal Characteristics of the Human Menstrual Cycle throughout Reproductive Life. J. Clin. Invest., 55:699-706, 1975. 8. Sherman, B. M., West, J. H., and Korenman, S. G. The Menopausal Transition: Analysis of LH, FSH, Estradici and Progesterone Concentra tions during Menstrual Cycles of Older Women. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab..42: 629-636, 1976. 9. Strott, C. A., Cargille, C. M., Ross, G. T., and Lipsett, M. B. The Short Luteal Phase. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., 30: 246-261, 1970. 10. Treloar, A. E., Boynton, R. E., Behn. B. G., and Brown, B. W. Variation of the Human Menstrual Cycle through Reproductive Life. Intern. J. Fertility, 12: 77-126, 1967. 11. Vollman, R. F. The Menstrual Cycle, 193 pp. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 1977. 12. Winter, J. S. D., and Faiman, C. The Development of Cyclic PituitaryGonadal Function in Adolescent Females. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., 37: 714-718, 1973. CANCER RESEARCH VOL. 38 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 17, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. Menstrual Cycle Patterns and Breast Cancer Risk Factors Robert B. Wallace, Barry M. Sherman, Judy A. Bean, et al. Cancer Res 1978;38:4021-4024. Updated version E-mail alerts Reprints and Subscriptions Permissions Access the most recent version of this article at: http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/38/11_Part_2/4021 Sign up to receive free email-alerts related to this article or journal. To order reprints of this article or to subscribe to the journal, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. To request permission to re-use all or part of this article, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on June 17, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research.