Hormones and Breast Cancer: Etiology vs. Ideology

 


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Air date: Wednesday, May 16, 2007, 3:00:00 PM
Category: Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
Runtime: 60 minutes
NLM Title: Hormones and breast cancer : etiology vs. ideology [electronic resource] / Robert Hoover.
Series: NIH director's Wednesday afternoon lecture series
Author: Hoover, Robert N.
National Institutes of Health (U.S.)
Publisher: [Bethesda, Md. : National Institutes of Health, 2007]
Other Title(s): NIH director's Wednesday afternoon lecture series
Abstract: (CIT): We have known for over 300 years that reproductive factors in women impact their subsequent risk of breast cancer. We have had good evidence that the ovary is likely to play a central role in breast cancer risk and natural history for over 100 years. We have known from the laboratory about the carcinogenicity of estrogen for almost 70 years. In addition, over the last 50 years, epidemiologists have identified over 20 independent risk factors for breast cancer, with all but a few having obvious hormonal implications. Over this same period of time, laboratory research on hormonal carcinogenesis has gained progressively more sophisticated insights into the mechanisms of action of hormones in physiologic and pathologic processes within the breast. As a result of all of this, a number of hypotheses have been developed to explain the hormonal etiology of breast cancer. Some of these have focused on mechanistic explanations of a single risk factor, while others have focused on unifying hypotheses designed to provide mechanisms that would explain many recognized risk factors. A number of these hypotheses have become widely accepted, with a few perceived as having moved from hypotheses to established facts, prompting the development of candidate interventions to prevent breast cancer. The purpose of this presentation will be to review what we know about hormonally-related breast cancer risk factors in human populations and some of the prominent hypotheses to explain them, and to then critically review how what we currently know supports or doesn't support these hypotheses. The overall goal will be to determine what we know well enough about breast hormonal carcinogenesis to proceed to practical prevention measures, and where a priority focus on research (laboratory and population) would be needed. Dr. Hoover is a physician-epidemiologist who is currently the Director of the Epidemiology and Biostatistics Program in the Intramural Research Program of the National Cancer Institute. He received his MD from Loyola University in Chicago in 1968. Following training in internal medicine at Cook County Hospital, he completed a Preventive Medicine residency at the Harvard School of Public Health, earning a Doctor of Science degree in Epidemiology from Harvard in 1976. He joined the Epidemiology Branch of NCI in 1972, and has occupied a series of positions of progressively increasing responsibility since that time. His research interests and contributions have focused on elucidating the etiology of cancers, and have covered virtually the entire range of cancer sites, and their possible environmental, life-style and genetic causes. He is the recipient of numerous honors and awards for his scientific findings and leadership, most recently The John Snow Award from the American Public Health Association, The Distinguished Achievement Award from the American Society of Preventive Oncology, and the Abraham Lilienfeld Award from the American College of Epidemiology. The NIH Director's Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series includes weekly scientific talks by some of the top researchers in the biomedical sciences worldwide.
Subjects: Breast Neoplasms--etiology
Estrogens--adverse effects
Gonadal Steroid Hormones--adverse effects
Progestins--adverse effects
Risk Factors
Publication Types: Government Publications
Lectures
Download: Download Video
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NLM Classification: WP 870
NLM ID: 101308611
CIT File ID: 13823
CIT Live ID: 5201
Permanent link: http://videocast.nih.gov/launch.asp?13823

 

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