Mammographic breast density and the risk of breast cancer: A
systematic review and meta-analysis
by F.T.H. Bodewes, A.A. van Asselt, M.D. Dorrius, M.J.W.
Greuter, G.H. de Bock
The Breast: Published: September 26, 2022
Objectives
Mammographic density is a well-defined risk factor for
breast cancer and having extremely dense breast tissue is associated with a
one-to six-fold increased risk of breast cancer. However, it is questioned
whether this increased risk estimate is applicable to current breast density
classification methods. Therefore, the aim of this study was to further
investigate and clarify the association between mammographic density and breast
cancer risk based on current literature.
Methods
Medline, Embase and Web of Science were systematically
searched for articles published since 2013, that used BI-RADS lexicon 5th
edition and incorporated data on digital mammography. Crude and maximally
confounder-adjusted data were pooled in odds ratios (ORs) using random-effects
models. Heterogeneity regarding breast cancer risks were investigated using I2 statistic,
stratified and sensitivity analyses.
Results
Nine observational studies were included. Having extremely
dense breast tissue (BI-RADS density D) resulted in a 2.11-fold (95% CI
1.84–2.42) increased breast cancer risk compared to having scattered dense
breast tissue (BI-RADS density B). Sensitivity analysis showed that when only
using data that had adjusted for age and BMI, the breast cancer risk was
1.83-fold (95% CI 1.52–2.21) increased. Both results were statistically
significant and homogenous.
Conclusions
Mammographic breast density BI-RADS D is associated with an
approximately two-fold increased risk of breast cancer compared to having BI-RADS
density B in general population women. This is a novel and lower risk estimate
compared to previously reported and might be explained due to the use of
digital mammography and BI-RADS lexicon 5th edition.