Investigator

Rogelio Robles-Morales

Ph.D. Student and Graduate Research, Staff · University of Arizona, Clinical Translational Sciences, College of Medicine

RRRogelio Robles-Mo…
Papers(1)
History of Infertilit…
Collaborators(9)
Aladdin H. ShadyabCynthia A. ThomsonDenise J. RoeHolly R. HarrisKathylynn SabodaLeslie V FarlandLihong QiNazmus SaquibPeter F. Schnatz
Institutions(6)
University Of ArizonaUniversity of Califor…Fred Hutch Cancer Cen…University of Califor…Sulaiman Al Rajhi Col…Drexel University

Papers

History of Infertility and Risk of Endometrial Cancer in the Women’s Health Initiative

Abstract Background: Several studies have suggested an association between infertility and risk of endometrial cancer. However, most studies have evaluated this relationship in premenopausal people, yet the mean age of endometrial cancer is 60 years, after the average age of menopause. Methods: Our study included Women’s Health Initiative participants who self-reported whether they had a history of infertility. Cox proportional hazards models were used to examine the association between infertility and incident endometrial cancer. Given that all infertility diagnoses occurred prior to study enrollment, we conducted secondary analyses using logistic regression examining prevalent endometrial cancer cases diagnosed before study baseline. Results: Approximately 18% of participants reported a history of infertility. No statistically significant association was observed between infertility and risk of incident endometrial cancer overall [incident cases = 1,622; HR = 1.12; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.99–1.26]. Although point estimates suggested an increase in risk of endometrial cancer among women with body mass index (BMI) ≥25 (HR = 1.15; 95% CI = 0.99–1.33), none of the associations were statistically significant. There was an association between history of infertility and prevalent endometrial cancer cases (OR = 1.19; 95% CI = 1.06–1.34), with the strongest association for infertility diagnosis due to endometriosis (OR 2.42; 95% CI = 1.83–3.19). Conclusions: In a population of postmenopausal participants, we observed a modest, but not statistically significant, association between overall infertility and incident endometrial cancer, with the suggestion of a higher risk among those with a BMI ≥ 25. Impact: Our findings highlight, as observed in previous studies, that risk factors for endometrial cancer may vary by BMI.

8Works
1Papers
9Collaborators
NeoplasmsEndometrial NeoplasmsCardiovascular DiseasesUterine Cervical NeoplasmsUterine Neoplasms

Positions

2021–

Ph.D. Student and Graduate Research, Staff

University of Arizona · Clinical Translational Sciences, College of Medicine

2018–

Gynecologic Oncology and Breast Cancer Surgeon.

Centro Medico de Sonora · Gynecologic Oncology

2018–

Gynecologic Oncologist

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social Delegación Sonora · Gynecology

2015–

Resident

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social · Oncology

2011–

Resident

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social · Obstetrics and Gynecology

Education

2018

Gynecologic Oncology

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México · Facultad de Medicina

2015

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México · Facultad de Medicina

2010

Medico Cirujano y Partero

Universidad de Guadalajara · Facultad de Medicina

Country

MX