Ej. Mockett et al., Fetal antigen hypothesis and ovarian cancer: Is there an immunogenic explanation for the reduction in risk associated with parity?, EPIDEMIOLOG, 11(1), 2000, pp. 55-58
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
The hypothesis that a woman's immunologic response to fetal antigens arisin
g from paternal genes may explain some of the reduction in risk of ovarian
cancer associated with parity has not, to our knowledge, been examined. We
analyzed data from a case-control study to evaluate the risk of epithelial
ovarian cancer among women of similar parity associated with proposed indic
es of paternally derived fetal antigen exposure. Cases included white women
20-79 years of age diagnosed with epithelial ovarian cancer in three count
ies in Washington State between January 1, 1986, and December 31, 1988 (N =
322). Controls (N = 426) were selected by random-digit dialing and were br
oadly similar to cases in age and county of residence. After excluding wome
n who had fewer than two pregnancies (or, in some analyses, fewer than two
livebirths) and adjusting for age and number of livebirths, we observed no
reduction in risk associated with number of marriages or number of partners
with whom a study participant conceived a pregnancy and/or had a child. Ne
vertheless, these relatively crude indices of exposure to paternally derive
d fetal antigens do not preclude the possibility that a woman's response to
other fetal or pregnancy-related antigens may antagonize the development o
f ovarian cancer.