BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis

The number of breast cancer women has increased dramatically in Korea. The cause is perceived to stem from adaptation to a westernized life style which increases body mass index (BMI). However, there are no meta-analysis data available that could help in understanding the relationship between Korean...

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Main Authors: Dukyoo Jung, Sun-Mi Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2009-03-01
Series:Asian Nursing Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1976131709600141
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spelling doaj-c56cd85b90574440875bd5abaab5da762020-11-24T23:02:37ZengElsevierAsian Nursing Research1976-13172009-03-0131314010.1016/S1976-1317(09)60014-1BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-AnalysisDukyoo Jung0Sun-Mi Lee1Division of Nursing Science, College of Health Sciences, Ewha Womans University, Seoul, KoreaCollege of Nursing, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, KoreaThe number of breast cancer women has increased dramatically in Korea. The cause is perceived to stem from adaptation to a westernized life style which increases body mass index (BMI). However, there are no meta-analysis data available that could help in understanding the relationship between Korean females' BMI and breast cancer occurrence. Method: All the published articles that investigated the relationship of Korean women's BMI with breast cancer prevalence between 1950 and 2007 were included in this study, based on a screen of the comput- erized databases that search for these articles (MEDLINE, RISS4U and KMBase). The commercial software Comprehensive Meta Analysis was used for the analysis. Results: The high BMI score group presented a higher prevalence of breast cancer on both a fixed-effects model [odds ratio (OR) = 1.282; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.209, 1.361] and a random-effects model (OR = 1.388; 95% CI = 1.129, 1.706). In addition, a high BMI score on pre- and postmenopausal groups was found to have a significantly higher prevalence of breast cancer on both a fixed-effects model (OR = 1.467; 95% CI = 1.268, 1.698, OR = 1.614; 95% CI = 1.360, 1.917, pre- and postmenopausal, respectively) and a random-effects model (OR = 1.387; 95% CI = 1.134, 1.696, OR = 1.681; 95% CI = 1.149, 2.461, pre- and postmenopausal, respectively). Conclusion: This meta-analysis of Korean women showed that a high BMI was related to a higher inci- dence rate of breast cancer. This study used a subgroup analysis of pre- and postmenopausal groups; the high BMI subset in both the pre- and postmenopausal groups was shown to have a higher incidence rate of breast cancer. [Asian Nursing Research 2009;3(1):31–40]http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1976131709600141body mass indexbreast cancerKorean womenmeta-analysissystematic review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dukyoo Jung
Sun-Mi Lee
spellingShingle Dukyoo Jung
Sun-Mi Lee
BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis
Asian Nursing Research
body mass index
breast cancer
Korean women
meta-analysis
systematic review
author_facet Dukyoo Jung
Sun-Mi Lee
author_sort Dukyoo Jung
title BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis
title_short BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis
title_full BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis
title_fullStr BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis
title_full_unstemmed BMI and Breast Cancer in Korean Women: A Meta-Analysis
title_sort bmi and breast cancer in korean women: a meta-analysis
publisher Elsevier
series Asian Nursing Research
issn 1976-1317
publishDate 2009-03-01
description The number of breast cancer women has increased dramatically in Korea. The cause is perceived to stem from adaptation to a westernized life style which increases body mass index (BMI). However, there are no meta-analysis data available that could help in understanding the relationship between Korean females' BMI and breast cancer occurrence. Method: All the published articles that investigated the relationship of Korean women's BMI with breast cancer prevalence between 1950 and 2007 were included in this study, based on a screen of the comput- erized databases that search for these articles (MEDLINE, RISS4U and KMBase). The commercial software Comprehensive Meta Analysis was used for the analysis. Results: The high BMI score group presented a higher prevalence of breast cancer on both a fixed-effects model [odds ratio (OR) = 1.282; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.209, 1.361] and a random-effects model (OR = 1.388; 95% CI = 1.129, 1.706). In addition, a high BMI score on pre- and postmenopausal groups was found to have a significantly higher prevalence of breast cancer on both a fixed-effects model (OR = 1.467; 95% CI = 1.268, 1.698, OR = 1.614; 95% CI = 1.360, 1.917, pre- and postmenopausal, respectively) and a random-effects model (OR = 1.387; 95% CI = 1.134, 1.696, OR = 1.681; 95% CI = 1.149, 2.461, pre- and postmenopausal, respectively). Conclusion: This meta-analysis of Korean women showed that a high BMI was related to a higher inci- dence rate of breast cancer. This study used a subgroup analysis of pre- and postmenopausal groups; the high BMI subset in both the pre- and postmenopausal groups was shown to have a higher incidence rate of breast cancer. [Asian Nursing Research 2009;3(1):31–40]
topic body mass index
breast cancer
Korean women
meta-analysis
systematic review
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1976131709600141
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