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The Risk of Breast Cancer after Irradiation of the Thymus in Infancy

List of authors.
  • Nancy G. Hildreth, Ph.D.,
  • Roy E. Shore, Ph.D., DR.P.H.,
  • and Philip M. Dvoretsky, M.D.

Abstract

It is well established that exposure to ionizing radiation during or after puberty increases a woman's risk for breast cancer, but it is less clear whether exposure to ionizing radiation very early in life is also carcinogenic. We studied the incidence of breast cancer prospectively in a cohort of 1201 women who received x-ray treatment in infancy for an enlarged thymus gland and in their 2469 nonirradiated sisters.

After an average of 36 years of follow-up, there were 22 breast cancers in the irradiated group and 12 among their sisters, yielding an adjusted rate ratio of 3.6 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.8 to 7.3). The estimated mean absorbed dose of radiation to the breast was 0.69 Gy. The first breast cancer was diagnosed 28 years after irradiation. The dose–response relation was linear (P<0.0001), with a relative risk of 3.48 for 1 Gy of radiation (95 percent confidence interval, 2.1 to 6.2) and an additive excess risk of 5.7 per 104 person-years per gray (95 percent confidence interval, 2.9 to 9.5).

We conclude that exposure of the female breast to ionizing radiation in infancy increases the risk of breast cancer later in life. (N Engl J Med 1989; 321:1281–4.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by a grant (5-ROl-CA-19764) from the National Cancer Institute.

We are indebted to Dr. Louis Hempelmann for the assembly and earlier follow-up surveys of this cohort; to Ms. Elizabeth Gajary for supervising the data collection; to Ms. Toni Minnick for assistance in data collection, coding, and editing; and to Ms. Diana Strickland for assistance with the computer.

Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Community and Preventive Medicine (N.G.H) and Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (P.M.D.), University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, N.Y., and the Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University Medical Center, New York (R.E.S.). Address reprint requests to Dr. Hildreth at the Department of Community and Preventive Medicine. University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Box 644, 601 Elmwood Ave., Rochester, NY 14642.

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