Volume 13, Issue 8 pp. 581-585
Original Reports

Breast cancer incidence and use of antihypertensive medication in women

Antonio González-Pérez

Corresponding Author

Antonio González-Pérez

Centro Español de Investigación Farmacoepidemiológica (CEIFE), Madrid, Spain

Centro Español de Investigación Farmacoepidemiológica, c/Almirante 28, 2° 28004-Madrid, Spain.Search for more papers by this author
Gunnar Ronquist

Gunnar Ronquist

Department of Medical Sciences, Clinical Chemistry, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

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Luis Alberto García Rodríguez

Luis Alberto García Rodríguez

Centro Español de Investigación Farmacoepidemiológica (CEIFE), Madrid, Spain

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First published: 15 December 2003
Citations: 32

No conflict of interest was declared.

Abstract

Purpose

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide. We attempted to investigate the association between the risk of breast cancer and use of captopril and other antihypertensive medication.

Methods

We performed a cohort study with a nested case-control analysis using the General Practitioner Research Database (GPRD) from the UK. We obtained adjusted estimates by fitting logistic regression models.

Results

The incidence rate of breast cancer in our cohort of women aged 30–79 years was 156 per 100 000 person-years. Overall, incidence of breast cancer among users of antihypertensive drugs was no different from the one among non-users (odds ratio (OR): 1.0; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.9–1.1). Captopril was not associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer (OR: 0.9; 95%CI: 0.6–1.3).

Conclusions

We did not find any clear association between antihypertensive drugs and risk of breast cancer. Similarly, captopril was not associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer risk. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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