Reassessing risk models for atypical hyperplasia: age may not matter.
Emanuele MazzolaSuzanne B CoopeyMolly GriffinFernanda PolubriaginofJulliette M BuckleyGiovanni ParmigianiJudy E GarberBarbara L SmithMichele A GaddMichelle C SpechtAnthony GuidiKevin S HughesPublished in: Breast cancer research and treatment (2017)
In contrast to current risk prediction models (e.g., Gail, Tyrer-Cuzick) which assume that the risk of developing breast cancer increases in relation to age at diagnosis of atypia, we found the 15-year cancer risk in our cohort was not significantly different for women between the ages of 35 (excluded) and 75. This implies that the "hits" received by the breast tissue along the "high-risk pathway" to cancer might possibly supersede other factors such as age.