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Alcohol intake and endogenous sex hormones in women: meta-analysis of cohort studies and Mendelian randomization

Tin, Sandar Tin; Smith-Byrne, Karl; Ferrari, Pietro; Rinaldi, Sabina; McCullough, Marjorie L; Teras, Lauren R; Manjer, Jonas; Giles, Graham; Marchand, Loïc Le; Haiman, Christopher A; Wilkens, Lynne R; Chen, Yu; Hankinson, Sue; Tworoger, Shelley; Eliassen, A Heather; Willett, Walter C; Ziegler, Regina G; Fuhrman, Barbara J; Sieri, Sabina; Agnoli, Claudia; Cauley, Jane; Menon, Usha; Fourkala, Evangelia Ounia; Rohan, Thomas E; Kaaks, Rudolf; Reeves, Gillian K; Key, Timothy J
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:The mechanisms underlying alcohol-induced breast carcinogenesis are not fully understood but may involve hormonal changes. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:(Alcohol Dehydrogenase 1B) variant (rs1229984). RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:between alcohol intake and higher free testosterone and lower SHBG (PP4: 0.81 and 0.97 respectively). CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Alcohol intake was associated with small increases in sex hormone concentrations, including bioavailable fractions, which may contribute to its effect on breast cancer risk.
PMID: 37645769
ISSN: 2693-5015
CID: 5738242

Chronotype and sleep duration interact to influence time to pregnancy: Results from a New York City cohort

Charifson, Mia; Ghassabian, Akhgar; Seok, Eunsil; Naidu, Mrudula; Mehta-Lee, Shilpi S; Brubaker, Sara G; Afanasyeva, Yelena; Chen, Yu; Liu, Mengling; Trasande, Leonardo; Kahn, Linda G
STUDY OBJECTIVE:To study associations between nighttime sleep characteristics and time to pregnancy. METHODS:Pregnant people age ≥18 years and<18 weeks' gestation were recruited from 3 New York University Grossman School of Medicine affiliated hospitals in Manhattan and Brooklyn (n = 1428) and enrolled into the New York University Children's Health and Environment Study. Participants in the first trimester of pregnancy were asked to recall their time to pregnancy and their sleep characteristics in the 3 months before conception. RESULTS:Participants who reported sleeping<7 hours per night tended to have shorter time to pregnancy than those who slept 7-9 hours per night (adjusted fecundability odds ratio = 1.16, 95% confidence interval: 0.94, 1.41). Participants with a sleep midpoint of 4 AM or later tended to have longer time to pregnancy compared with those with earlier sleep midpoints (before 4 AM) (adjusted fecundability odds ratio = 0.88, 95% confidence interval: 0.74, 1.04). When stratified by sleep midpoint, sleeping<7 hours was significantly associated with shorter time to pregnancy only among those whose sleep midpoint was before 4 AM (adjusted fecundability odds ratio = 1.33, 95% confidence interval: 1.07, 1.67). CONCLUSIONS:The association of sleep duration with time to pregnancy was modified by chronotype, suggesting that both biological and behavioral aspects of sleep may influence fecundability.
PMCID:10514230
PMID: 37055302
ISSN: 2352-7226
CID: 5606752

Endogenous sex steroid hormones and risk of liver cancer among US men: Results from the Liver Cancer Pooling Project

Wu, Zeni; Petrick, Jessica L; Florio, Andrea A; Guillemette, Chantal; Beane Freeman, Laura E; Buring, Julie E; Bradwin, Gary; Caron, Patrick; Chen, Yu; Eliassen, A Heather; Engel, Lawrence S; Freedman, Neal D; Gaziano, J Michael; Giovannuci, Edward L; Hofmann, Jonathan N; Huang, Wen-Yi; Kirsh, Victoria A; Kitahara, Cari M; Koshiol, Jill; Lee, I-Min; Liao, Linda M; Newton, Christina C; Palmer, Julie R; Purdue, Mark P; Rohan, Thomas E; Rosenberg, Lynn; Sesso, Howard D; Sinha, Rashmi; Stampfer, Meir J; Um, Caroline Y; Van Den Eeden, Stephen K; Visvanathan, Kala; Wactawski-Wende, Jean; Zeleniuch-Jacquotte, Anne; Zhang, Xuehong; Graubard, Barry I; Campbell, Peter T; McGlynn, Katherine A
BACKGROUND & AIMS/UNASSIGNED:Incidence rates of liver cancer in most populations are two to three times higher among men than women. The higher rates among men have led to the suggestion that androgens are related to increased risk whereas oestrogens are related to decreased risk. This hypothesis was investigated in the present study via a nested case-control analysis of pre-diagnostic sex steroid hormone levels among men in five US cohorts. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Concentrations of sex steroid hormones and sex hormone-binding globulin were quantitated using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and a competitive electrochemiluminescence immunoassay, respectively. Multivariable conditional logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios (ORs) and 95% CIs for associations between hormones and liver cancer among 275 men who subsequently developed liver cancer and 768 comparison men. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED: = 1.77, 95% CI = 1.38-2.29), dihydrotestosterone (OR = 1.76, 95% CI = 1.21-2.57), oestrone (OR = 1.74, 95% CI = 1.08-2.79), total oestradiol (OR = 1.58, 95% CI=1.22-20.05), and sex hormone-binding globulin (OR = 1.63, 95% CI = 1.27-2.11) were associated with increased risk. Higher concentrations of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), however, were associated with a 53% decreased risk (OR = 0.47, 95% CI = 0.33-0.68). CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Higher concentrations of both androgens (testosterone, dihydrotestosterone) and their aromatised oestrogenic metabolites (oestrone, oestradiol) were observed among men who subsequently developed liver cancer compared with men who did not. As DHEA is an adrenal precursor of both androgens and oestrogens, these results may suggest that a lower capacity to convert DHEA to androgens, and their subsequent conversion to oestrogens, confers a lower risk of liver cancer, whereas a greater capacity to convert DHEA confers a greater risk. IMPACT AND IMPLICATIONS/UNASSIGNED:This study does not fully support the current hormone hypothesis as both androgen and oestrogen levels were associated with increased risk of liver cancer among men. The study also found that higher DHEA levels were associated with lower risk, thus suggesting the hypothesis that greater capacity to convert DHEA could be associated with increased liver cancer risk among men.
PMCID:10326694
PMID: 37425211
ISSN: 2589-5559
CID: 5537372

Risk factors for endometrial cancer in Black women

Sponholtz, Todd R; Palmer, Julie R; Rosenberg, Lynn; Chen, Chu; Chen, Yu; Clarke, Megan A; Clendenen, Tess; Du, Mengmeng; Johnson, Lisa; Liao, Linda M; Michels, Kara A; O'Connell, Kelli; Olson, Sara H; Petruzella, Stacey; Rebbeck, Timothy R; Setiawan, Veronica Wendy; Trabert, Britton; Weiss, Noel S; Wentzensen, Nicholas; Wilkens, Lynne; Wise, Lauren A
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The incidence of endometrial cancer (EC) has been increasing faster among Black women than among other racial/ethnic groups in the United States. Although the mortality rate is nearly twice as high among Black than White women, there is a paucity of literature on risk factors for EC among Black women, particularly regarding menopausal hormone use and severe obesity. METHODS:We pooled questionnaire data on 811 EC cases and 3,124 controls from eight studies with data on self-identified Black women (4 case-control and 4 cohort studies). We analyzed cohort studies as nested case-control studies with up to 4 controls selected per case. We used logistic regression to estimate multivariable-adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). RESULTS:was not appreciably associated with EC risk (OR 1.21, 95% CI 0.74, 1.99). Associations of reproductive history with EC were similar to those observed in studies of White women. Long-term use of estrogen-only menopausal hormones was associated with an increased risk of EC (≥ 5 years vs. never use: OR 2.08, 95% CI: 1.06, 4.06). CONCLUSIONS:Our results suggest that the associations of established risk factors with EC are similar between Black and White women. Other explanations, such as differences in the prevalence of known risk factors or previously unidentified risk factors likely underlie the recent increases in EC incidence among Black women.
PMID: 36418803
ISSN: 1573-7225
CID: 5384292

Corrigendum to "Vascular endothelium as a target for perfluroalkyl substances (PFAs)" [Environ. Res. 212 (2022) 1-4/11339]

Wittkopp, Sharine; Wu, Fen; Windheim, Joseph; Robinson, Morgan; Kannan, Kurunthachalam; Katz, Stuart D; Chen, Yu; Newman, Jonathan D; [Levy, Natalie]
PMID: 36805490
ISSN: 1096-0953
CID: 5428782

A cross-sectional study of inflammatory markers as determinants of circulating kynurenines in the Lung Cancer Cohort Consortium

Midttun, Øivind; Ulvik, Arve; Meyer, Klaus; Zahed, Hana; Giles, Graham G; Manjer, Jonas; Sandsveden, Malte; Langhammer, Arnulf; Sørgjerd, Elin Pettersen; Behndig, Annelie F; Johansson, Mikael; Freedman, Neal D; Huang, Wen-Yi; Chen, Chu; Prentice, Ross; Stevens, Victoria L; Wang, Ying; Le Marchand, Loïc; Weinstein, Stephanie J; Cai, Qiuyin; Arslan, Alan A; Chen, Yu; Shu, Xiao-Ou; Zheng, Wei; Yuan, Jian-Min; Koh, Woon-Puay; Visvanathan, Kala; Sesso, Howard D; Zhang, Xuehong; Gaziano, J Michael; Fanidi, Anouar; Robbins, Hilary A; Brennan, Paul; Johansson, Mattias; Ueland, Per M
Circulating concentrations of metabolites (collectively called kynurenines) in the kynurenine pathway of tryptophan metabolism increase during inflammation, particularly in response to interferon-gamma (IFN-γ). Neopterin and the kynurenine/tryptophan ratio (KTR) are IFN-γ induced inflammatory markers, and together with C-reactive protein (CRP) and kynurenines they are associated with various diseases, but comprehensive data on the strength of associations of inflammatory markers with circulating concentrations of kynurenines are lacking. We measured circulating concentrations of neopterin, CRP, tryptophan and seven kynurenines in 5314 controls from 20 cohorts in the Lung Cancer Cohort Consortium (LC3). The associations of neopterin, KTR and CRP with kynurenines were investigated using regression models. In mixed models, one standard deviation (SD) higher KTR was associated with a 0.46 SD higher quinolinic acid (QA), and 0.31 SD higher 3-hydroxykynurenine (HK). One SD higher neopterin was associated with 0.48, 0.44, 0.36 and 0.28 SD higher KTR, QA, kynurenine and HK, respectively. KTR and neopterin respectively explained 24.1% and 16.7% of the variation in QA, and 11.4% and 7.5% of HK. CRP was only weakly associated with kynurenines in regression models. In summary, QA was the metabolite that was most strongly associated with the inflammatory markers. In general, the inflammatory markers were most strongly related to metabolites located along the tryptophan-NAD axis, which may support suggestions of increased production of NAD from tryptophan during inflammation.
PMCID:9849351
PMID: 36653422
ISSN: 2045-2322
CID: 5410762

Association between recent methamphetamine use, antiretroviral therapy and HIV viral load; a mediation analysis from a cohort of HIV positive persons who inject drugs in Hai Phong, Vietnam

Feelemyer, Jonathan; Des Jarlais, Don; Nagot, Nicolas; Duong Thi, Huong; Thi Hai, Oanh Khuat; Pham Minh, Khuê; Hoang Thi, Giang; Nham Thi Tuyet, Thanh; Cleland, Charles M; Arasteh, Kamyar; Caniglia, Ellen; Chen, Yu; Bart, Gavin; Moles, Jean Pierre; Vu Hai, Vinh; Vallo, Roselyne; Quillet, Catherine; Rapoud, Delphine; Sao, Mai Le; Michel, Laurent; Laureillard, Didier; Khan, Maria R
BACKGROUND:There has been a significant increase in methamphetamine use among persons who use drugs in Vietnam in the last 5-10 years. We examined the degree to which adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) mediates the relationship between recent methamphetamine use and unsuppressed HIV viral load among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Hai Phong, Vietnam. METHODS:We recruited PWID from October 2016-October 2018 and enrolled HIV positive PWID into a cohort, with up to three years of total follow-up. We assessed relationships among recent methamphetamine use frequency, ART adherence and unsuppressed HIV viral load. Mediation analysis was used to estimate the total and natural direct effects of recent methamphetamine use on unsuppressed HIV viral load and the indirect effect proportion. RESULTS:We enrolled 792 HIV seropositive PWID into the cohort; approximately 75.9% reported high/perfect ART adherence at baseline and 81.3% were virally suppressed. In mediation analysis, the total effect for the association between methamphetamine use and unsuppressed HIV viral load (1000 copies/mL) was 3.94 (95% CI: 1.95, 7.96); the natural direct effect was 2.14 (95% CI: 1.29, 3.55); the proportion mediated by self-reported ART adherence was 0.444. Similar results were found when examining lower unsuppressed HIV viral load cutpoints of 250 copies/mL and 500 copies/mL. CONCLUSIONS:Methamphetamine use is associated with unsuppressed HIV viral load among PWID despite high levels of ART adherence. Further research is needed to better understand these relationships, with emphasis on potential biological pathways that may interact with ART.
PMID: 36637437
ISSN: 1758-1052
CID: 5403302

Circulating vitamin D and breast cancer risk: an international pooling project of 17 cohorts

Visvanathan, Kala; Mondul, Alison M; Zeleniuch-Jacquotte, Anne; Wang, Molin; Gail, Mitchell H; Yaun, Shiaw-Shyuan; Weinstein, Stephanie J; McCullough, Marjorie L; Eliassen, A Heather; Cook, Nancy R; Agnoli, Claudia; Almquist, Martin; Black, Amanda; Buring, Julie E; Chen, Chu; Chen, Yu; Clendenen, Tess; Dossus, Laure; Fedirko, Veronika; Gierach, Gretchen L; Giovannucci, Edward L; Goodman, Gary E; Goodman, Marc T; Guénel, Pascal; Hallmans, Göran; Hankinson, Susan E; Horst, Ronald L; Hou, Tao; Huang, Wen-Yi; Jones, Michael E; Joshu, Corrine E; Kaaks, Rudolf; Krogh, Vittorio; Kühn, Tilman; Kvaskoff, Marina; Lee, I-Min; Mahamat-Saleh, Yahya; Malm, Johan; Manjer, Jonas; Maskarinec, Gertraud; Millen, Amy E; Mukhtar, Toqir K; Neuhouser, Marian L; Robsahm, Trude E; Schoemaker, Minouk J; Sieri, Sabina; Sund, Malin; Swerdlow, Anthony J; Thomson, Cynthia A; Ursin, Giske; Wactawski-Wende, Jean; Wang, Ying; Wilkens, Lynne R; Wu, Yujie; Zoltick, Emilie; Willett, Walter C; Smith-Warner, Stephanie A; Ziegler, Regina G
Laboratory and animal research support a protective role for vitamin D in breast carcinogenesis, but epidemiologic studies have been inconclusive. To examine comprehensively the relationship of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] to subsequent breast cancer incidence, we harmonized and pooled participant-level data from 10 U.S. and 7 European prospective cohorts. Included were 10,484 invasive breast cancer cases and 12,953 matched controls. Median age (interdecile range) was 57 (42-68) years at blood collection and 63 (49-75) years at breast cancer diagnosis. Prediagnostic circulating 25(OH)D was either newly measured using a widely accepted immunoassay and laboratory or, if previously measured by the cohort, calibrated to this assay to permit using a common metric. Study-specific relative risks (RRs) for season-standardized 25(OH)D concentrations were estimated by conditional logistic regression and combined by random-effects models. Circulating 25(OH)D increased from a median of 22.6 nmol/L in consortium-wide decile 1 to 93.2 nmol/L in decile 10. Breast cancer risk in each decile was not statistically significantly different from risk in decile 5 in models adjusted for breast cancer risk factors, and no trend was apparent (P-trend = 0.64). Compared to women with sufficient 25(OH)D based on Institute of Medicine guidelines (50- < 62.5 nmol/L), RRs were not statistically significantly different at either low concentrations (< 20 nmol/L, 3% of controls) or high concentrations (100- < 125 nmol/L, 3% of controls; ≥ 125 nmol/L, 0.7% of controls). RR per 25 nmol/L increase in 25(OH)D was 0.99 [95% confidence intervaI (CI) 0.95-1.03]. Associations remained null across subgroups, including those defined by body mass index, physical activity, latitude, and season of blood collection. Although none of the associations by tumor characteristics reached statistical significance, suggestive inverse associations were seen for distant and triple negative tumors. Circulating 25(OH)D, comparably measured in 17 international cohorts and season-standardized, was not related to subsequent incidence of invasive breast cancer over a broad range in vitamin D status.
PMID: 36593337
ISSN: 1573-7284
CID: 5409842

Rheumatoid Arthritis and Cognitive Impairment or Dementia: An Updated Review of Epidemiological Data

Sharma, Sneha R; Chen, Yu
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is hypothesized to be associated with cognitive impairment and dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, through shared biological processes related to inflammation. It is important to elucidate this potential relationship as both conditions confer increased morbidity and even mortality among older adults. This narrative review provides a survey of recent epidemiologic studies, examining the association between rheumatoid arthritis and either dementia or cognitive impairment. Sixteen studies were included after searching in PubMed and EMBASE. All were published between 2012 and 2022 and were characterized as epidemiologic studies (either cohort, cross-sectional, or case-control). Studies varied in location, design, measures of exposure and outcome, and covariates considered. Of the 16 studies included, only five found statistically significant positive associations between RA and dementia or cognitive impairment. One study found an inverse relationship, while five studies found no associations at all. The remaining five studies found variable statistically significant associations between demographic or RA disease characteristics and cognitive measures. Given these mixed findings, further studies at both the mechanistic and population level are needed to clarify the possible shared biological underpinnings of these two conditions.
PMID: 37599533
ISSN: 1875-8908
CID: 5598202

Normative Data and Conversion Equation for Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography in an International Healthy Control Cohort

Kenney, Rachel; Liu, Mengling; Hasanaj, Lisena; Joseph, Binu; Al-Hassan, Abdullah A; Balk, Lisanne; Behbehani, Raed; Brandt, Alexander U; Calabresi, Peter A; Frohman, Elliot M; Frohman, Teresa; Havla, Joachim; Hemmer, Bernhard; Jiang, Hong; Knier, Benjamin; Korn, Thomas; Leocani, Letizia; Martínez-Lapiscina, Elena H; Papadopoulou, Athina; Paul, Friedemann; Petzold, Axel; Pisa, Marco; Villoslada, Pablo; Zimmermann, Hanna; Ishikawa, Hiroshi; Schuman, Joel S; Wollstein, Gadi; Chen, Yu; Saidha, Shiv; Thorpe, Lorna E; Galetta, Steven L; Balcer, Laura J
BACKGROUND:Spectral-domain (SD-) optical coherence tomography (OCT) can reliably measure axonal (peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer [pRNFL]) and neuronal (macular ganglion cell + inner plexiform layer [GCIPL]) thinning in the retina. Measurements from 2 commonly used SD-OCT devices are often pooled together in multiple sclerosis (MS) studies and clinical trials despite software and segmentation algorithm differences; however, individual pRNFL and GCIPL thickness measurements are not interchangeable between devices. In some circumstances, such as in the absence of a consistent OCT segmentation algorithm across platforms, a conversion equation to transform measurements between devices may be useful to facilitate pooling of data. The availability of normative data for SD-OCT measurements is limited by the lack of a large representative world-wide sample across various ages and ethnicities. Larger international studies that evaluate the effects of age, sex, and race/ethnicity on SD-OCT measurements in healthy control participants are needed to provide normative values that reflect these demographic subgroups to provide comparisons to MS retinal degeneration. METHODS:Participants were part of an 11-site collaboration within the International Multiple Sclerosis Visual System (IMSVISUAL) consortium. SD-OCT was performed by a trained technician for healthy control subjects using Spectralis or Cirrus SD-OCT devices. Peripapillary pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses were measured on one or both devices. Automated segmentation protocols, in conjunction with manual inspection and correction of lines delineating retinal layers, were used. A conversion equation was developed using structural equation modeling, accounting for clustering, with healthy control data from one site where participants were scanned on both devices on the same day. Normative values were evaluated, with the entire cohort, for pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses for each decade of age, by sex, and across racial groups using generalized estimating equation (GEE) models, accounting for clustering and adjusting for within-patient, intereye correlations. Change-point analyses were performed to determine at what age pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses exhibit accelerated rates of decline. RESULTS:The healthy control cohort (n = 546) was 54% male and had a wide distribution of ages, ranging from 18 to 87 years, with a mean (SD) age of 39.3 (14.6) years. Based on 346 control participants at a single site, the conversion equation for pRNFL was Cirrus = -5.0 + (1.0 × Spectralis global value). Based on 228 controls, the equation for GCIPL was Cirrus = -4.5 + (0.9 × Spectralis global value). Standard error was 0.02 for both equations. After the age of 40 years, there was a decline of -2.4 μm per decade in pRNFL thickness ( P < 0.001, GEE models adjusting for sex, race, and country) and -1.4 μm per decade in GCIPL thickness ( P < 0.001). There was a small difference in pRNFL thickness based on sex, with female participants having slightly higher thickness (2.6 μm, P = 0.003). There was no association between GCIPL thickness and sex. Likewise, there was no association between race/ethnicity and pRNFL or GCIPL thicknesses. CONCLUSIONS:A conversion factor may be required when using data that are derived between different SD-OCT platforms in clinical trials and observational studies; this is particularly true for smaller cross-sectional studies or when a consistent segmentation algorithm is not available. The above conversion equations can be used when pooling data from Spectralis and Cirrus SD-OCT devices for pRNFL and GCIPL thicknesses. A faster decline in retinal thickness may occur after the age of 40 years, even in the absence of significant differences across racial groups.
PMID: 36049213
ISSN: 1536-5166
CID: 5337812