Seasonal purchase of antihistamines and ovarian cancer risk in the Cancer Loyalty Card Study (CLOCS): results from an observational case-control study

Hannah Brewer, Qianhui Jiang, Sudha Sundar, Yasemin Hirst, James Flanagan
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 Objectives & ApproachParticipants from the Cancer Loyalty Card Study (CLOCS) included ovarian cancer patients (cases, n=153) and women without a diagnosis of ovarian cancer (controls, n=120). Up to 6 years of purchase history was retrieved from two participating high street retailers from 2014-2022. Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals for ovarian cancer associated with antihistamine purchases, adjusting for confounders. The association was stratified by season of purchase, age, histology, and family history.
 Relevance to Digital FootprintsThis study is one of the first to utilise transaction data from high street retailers to investigate associations with cancer risk, based on what participants are buying.
 ResultsEver purchasing antihistamines was not significantly associated with ovarian cancer overall in this small study (OR=0.68 (0.39-1.19)). However, antihistamine purchases were significantly associated with reduced ovarian cancer risk when purchased only in spring and/or summer (OR=0.37 (0.17-0.82)) and in non-serous ovarian cancer (OR=0.41 (0.18-0.93)) in stratified analyses.
 Conclusions & ImplicationsAntihistamine purchase is associated with reduced ovarian cancer risk when purchased seasonally. However, larger studies are required to understand the mechanisms of reduced ovarian cancer risk related to seasonal purchases of antihistamines and allergies.","PeriodicalId":132937,"journal":{"name":"International Journal for Population Data Science","volume":"2011 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal for Population Data Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v8i3.2292","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Introduction & BackgroundAntihistamine use has been associated with a reduction in ovarian cancer incidence. Herein, we investigate antihistamine exposure in relation to ovarian cancer risk using a novel data resource by examining purchase histories from retailer loyalty card data. Objectives & ApproachParticipants from the Cancer Loyalty Card Study (CLOCS) included ovarian cancer patients (cases, n=153) and women without a diagnosis of ovarian cancer (controls, n=120). Up to 6 years of purchase history was retrieved from two participating high street retailers from 2014-2022. Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals for ovarian cancer associated with antihistamine purchases, adjusting for confounders. The association was stratified by season of purchase, age, histology, and family history. Relevance to Digital FootprintsThis study is one of the first to utilise transaction data from high street retailers to investigate associations with cancer risk, based on what participants are buying. ResultsEver purchasing antihistamines was not significantly associated with ovarian cancer overall in this small study (OR=0.68 (0.39-1.19)). However, antihistamine purchases were significantly associated with reduced ovarian cancer risk when purchased only in spring and/or summer (OR=0.37 (0.17-0.82)) and in non-serous ovarian cancer (OR=0.41 (0.18-0.93)) in stratified analyses. Conclusions & ImplicationsAntihistamine purchase is associated with reduced ovarian cancer risk when purchased seasonally. However, larger studies are required to understand the mechanisms of reduced ovarian cancer risk related to seasonal purchases of antihistamines and allergies.
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癌症忠诚卡研究(CLOCS)中抗组胺药的季节性购买与卵巢癌风险:一项观察性病例对照研究的结果
介绍,背景:抗组胺药的使用与卵巢癌发病率的降低有关。在此,我们研究抗组胺暴露与卵巢癌风险的关系,使用一种新的数据资源,通过检查零售商会员卡数据中的购买历史。 目标,癌症忠诚卡研究(CLOCS)的参与者包括卵巢癌患者(病例,n=153)和未诊断为卵巢癌的女性(对照组,n=120)。从两家参与的高街零售商那里检索了2014-2022年长达6年的购买历史。使用逻辑回归估计与抗组胺购买相关的卵巢癌的比值比(OR)和95%置信区间,调整混杂因素。根据购买季节、年龄、组织学和家族史对相关性进行分层。 与数字足迹的相关性这项研究是第一个利用高街零售商的交易数据来调查与癌症风险的关系的研究之一,基于参与者正在购买的东西。结果在这项小型研究中,sever购买抗组胺药与卵巢癌总体上没有显著相关性(OR=0.68(0.39-1.19))。然而,在分层分析中,仅在春季和/或夏季购买抗组胺药(or =0.37(0.17-0.82))和在非浆液性卵巢癌中购买抗组胺药(or =0.41(0.18-0.93))与降低卵巢癌风险显著相关。结论,季节性购买组胺与降低卵巢癌风险有关。然而,需要更大规模的研究来了解与季节性购买抗组胺药和过敏有关的降低卵巢癌风险的机制。
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