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V C M Koot a Julius Centre for Health Sciences and Primary
Care, University Medical Centre, Box 85500, 3508 GA Utrecht,
Netherlands, b Department of Medical Epidemiology,
Karolinska Institute, Box 281, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden Correspondence to: V C M Kuck-Koot,
Comprehensive Cancer Centre Middle Netherlands, PO Box 19079, 3501 DB Utrecht, Netherlands kuckkoot{at}ikmn.nl
The potential health hazards of breast implants have been
heavily debated for the past decade, yet only one study has reported on
long term mortality among women with such implants, and around one
fifth of the participants were lost to follow up.
1 2
We
assessed total and cause specific mortality among Swedish women who
underwent augmentation mammoplasty between 1965 and 1993. As a desire
for cosmetic surgery represents underlying psychopathology in some
patients, we hypothesised that deaths due to suicide may be
over-represented.3
Details about accrual of the cohort have been given
elsewhere.4 We obtained records from the Swedish Inpatient
Register of all 15-69 year old women who had had breast implants
(n=7585) in 1965-93. We identified records with erroneous
registration numbers or where emigration or death occurred before
surgery through linkages with registers held by Statistics Sweden,
using the unique national registration numbers. We excluded such
records and records where surgery occurred at hospitals without
surgical services (n=138). We also excluded women who had received an
implant after surgery for breast cancer (n=3926), identified through
the cancer register. The final study cohort comprised 3521 women, with
a mean age of 31.6 (SD 8.6) years.
Follow up started on the day of first implantation surgery and
stopped at date of emigration, death, or end of follow up (31 December
1994), whichever occurred first. The cohort members were followed for
an average of 11.3 (range 0.3-29.9) years, corresponding to 39 735
person years at risk. We compared the observed number of deaths with
the expected number of deaths, the ratio of these two numbers giving
the standardised mortality ratio. We obtained the expected number of
deaths by multiplying the observed number of person years at risk in
the cohort, divided into 5 year age strata and 1 calendar year strata,
by the stratum specific mortality rates, derived from official Swedish
death statistics. The standardised mortality ratio can therefore be
viewed as a measure of relative risk, with the Swedish female
population matched for age and calendar year serving as reference. We
calculated 95% confidence intervals, assuming that the number of
observed events followed a Poisson distribution. We coded underlying
causes of death according to the international classification of
diseases (7th, 8th, and 9th revisions) into suicide, unintentional
injury, cardiovascular diseases, malignancies, and other causes.
Although 58.7 deaths were expected, 85 women died (standardised
mortality ratio 1.5, 1.2 to 1.8; table). Fifteen women committed suicide, compared with 5.2 expected deaths (2.9, 1.6 to 4.8). Excess
deaths were also due to malignant disease (1.4, 1.0 to 1.9), mainly
lung cancer. The number of deaths for all other causes was close to
expected.
Women who undergo cosmetic surgery for breast augmentation
are more likely to commit suicide than women from the general
population. The 50% excess mortality found by us in our prospective
study of 3000 Swedish women contrasts with the decreased mortality
reported from the United States.2 This may reflect
different reasons for self selection for plastic surgery or may be an
effect of losses to follow up in the American study. Both the American
study and our study did, however, show an increased risk for suicide in
women opting for breast augmentation. Our excess mortality was
explained by the excess of suicides and deaths from malignant disease.
Deaths due to malignancy were mainly linked to smoking, previously
shown as common in our cohort.5 Given the well documented link between psychiatric disorders and a desire for cosmetic surgery, the increased risk for death from suicide may reflect a greater prevalence of psychopathology rather than a causal association between
implant surgery and suicide.3 Surgeons evaluating
candidates for breast implant surgery need to be vigilant for
subtle signs of psychiatric problems.
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Subjects and methods
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Subjects and methods
Results
Comment
References
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Results
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Subjects and methods
Results
Comment
References
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Comment
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Subjects and methods
Results
Comment
References
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: VCMK, the principal investigator, discussed the core ideas, performed the record linkages, outlined and performed analyses, and wrote most of the paper. PHMP discussed the core ideas and participated in data interpretation and writing of the paper. FG participated in discussions about the core ideas, made suggestions about analyses, and helped VCMK with the practical analysis. DEG discussed the core ideas, the design of the study, the interpretation of the data, and writing of the paper. ON initiated the research, discussed the core ideas, formulated the primary study hypothesis, made suggestions about analyses and interpretation of the data, and supervised the writing. DEG and ON will act as guarantors for the paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: This work was supported by a contract from the International Epidemiology Institute, Rockville, MA. VCMK was financially supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. |
Angell M.
Evaluating the health risks of breast implants: the interplay of medical science, the law, and public opinion.
N Engl J Med
1996;
334:
1513-1518 |
| 2. | Brinton LA, Lubin JH, Burich MC, Colton T, Hoover RN. Mortality among augmentation mammoplasty patients. Epidemiology 2001; 12: 321-326[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 3. | Hasan JS. Psychological issues in cosmetic surgery: a functional overview. Ann Plast Surg 2000; 44: 89-96[Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 4. |
Nyren O, Yin L, Josefsson S, McLaughlin JK, Blot WJ, Engqvist M, et al.
Risk of connective tissue disease and related disorders among women with breast implants: a nation-wide retrospective cohort study in Sweden.
BMJ
1998;
316:
417-422 |
| 5. | Fryzek JP, Weiderpass E, Signorello LB, Hakelius L, Lipworth L, Blot WJ, et al. Characteristics of women with cosmetic breast augmentation surgery compared with breast reduction surgery patients and women in the general population of Sweden. Ann Plast Surg 2000; 45: 349-356[Web of Science][Medline]. |
(Accepted 17 January 2003)
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