Investigator

Jane A. Cauley

Distinguished Professor of Epidemiology · University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Epidemiology

About

JACJane A. Cauley
Papers(1)
Association of Endoge…
Collaborators(7)
Jeffrey A. TiceKara A MichelsLouise A. BrintonRoni T. FalkTrisha F. HueBritton TrabertDoug C. Bauer
Institutions(5)
University Of Pittsbu…University Of Califor…Division Of Cancer Ep…National Cancer Insti…University of Utah

Papers

Association of Endogenous Pregnenolone, Progesterone, and Related Metabolites with Risk of Endometrial and Ovarian Cancers in Postmenopausal Women: The B∼FIT Cohort

AbstractBackground:Postmenopausal pregnenolone and/or progesterone levels in relation to endometrial and ovarian cancer risks have been infrequently evaluated. To address this, we utilized a sensitive and reliable assay to quantify prediagnostic levels of seven markers related to endogenous hormone metabolism.Methods:Hormones were quantified in baseline serum collected from postmenopausal women in a cohort study nested within the Breast and Bone Follow-up to the Fracture Intervention Trial (B∼FIT). Women using exogenous hormones at baseline (1992–1993) were excluded. Incident endometrial (n = 65) and ovarian (n = 67) cancers were diagnosed during 12 follow-up years and compared with a subcohort of 345 women (no hysterectomy) and 413 women (no oophorectomy), respectively. Cox models with robust variance were used to estimate cancer risk.Results:Circulating progesterone levels were not associated with endometrial [tertile (T)3 vs. T1 HR (95% confidence interval): 1.87 (0.85–4.11); Ptrend = 0.17] or ovarian cancer risk [1.16 (0.58–2.33); 0.73]. Increasing levels of the progesterone-to-estradiol ratio were inversely associated with endometrial cancer risk [T3 vs. T1: 0.29 (0.09–0.95); 0.03]. Increasing levels of 17-hydroxypregnenolone were inversely associated with endometrial cancer risk [0.40 (0.18–0.91); 0.03] and positively associated with ovarian cancer risk [3.11 (1.39–6.93); 0.01].Conclusions:Using sensitive and reliable assays, this study provides novel data that endogenous progesterone levels are not strongly associated with incident endometrial or ovarian cancer risks. 17-hydroxypregnenolone was positively associated with ovarian cancer and inversely associated with endometrial cancer.Impact:While our results require replication in large studies, they provide further support of the hormonal etiology of endometrial and ovarian cancers.

894Works
1Papers
7Collaborators
OsteoporosisNeoplasmsOsteoarthritis, KneeAnemiaArthritis, RheumatoidCardiovascular DiseasesProstatic Neoplasms

Positions

2016–

Distinguished Professor of Epidemiology

University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health · Epidemiology

2015–

Associate Dean for Research

University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health

2002–

Professor

University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health · Epidemiology

1993–

Associate Professor

University of Pittsburgh · Epidemiology

Tenure

University of Pittsburgh · Epidemiology

1986–

Assistant Professor

University of Pittsburgh · Epidemiology

Education

1986

Postdoctoral Fellow, Individual National Research Service Award

University of Pittsburgh · Epidemiology

1983

DrPH

University of Pittsburgh · Epidemiology

1980

MPH

University of Pittsburgh · Epidemiology

1975

B.S. Nursing (Cum Laude)

Boston College

Country

US

Keywords
Epidemiology of Breast CancerEpidemiology of Osteoporotic Fractures and FallsEpidemiology of Sex Hormones and Their Relationship to Chronic DiseaseEpidemiology of Agingincluding Women's health issuesand heart diseaseEthnic/Racial Differences in FractureInflammationVitamin D and Fractures/ OsteoporosisSleep and its relationship to fracturesfallsphysical and cognitive function and mortality
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