Publication: Natural hair color and the incidence of endometriosis
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2006
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Elsevier
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Missmer, Stacey A., Donna Spiegelman, Susan E. Hankinson, Susan Malspeis, Robert L. Barbieri, and David J. Hunter. 2006. “Natural Hair Color and the Incidence of Endometriosis.” Fertility and Sterility 85 (4): 866–70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2005.12.008.
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Abstract
Objective: To investigate a previously hypothesized relation between natural hair color and endometriosis. Design: Prospective cohort study.Setting: Nurses' Health Study 11 with 10 years of follow-up.Participant(s): A total of 90,065 women, 25-42 years old, who had never been diagnosed with endometriosis, infertility, or cancer at baseline in 1989. Main Outcome Measure(s): Incidence of laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis according to natural hair color. Result(s): During 379,422 person-years of follow-up, 1,130 cases of laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis were reported among women with no past infertility. After adjusting for age, calendar time, parity, race, and body mass index at a-e 18, we observed no association overall. However, compared with women with any other hair color, we observed an increased rate of endometriosis among women with naturally red hair who had never been infertile (incidence rate = 1.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.0-1.7), but a decreased rate among women with naturally red hair among women who were infertile (incidence rate = 0.4, 95% Cl = 0.2-1.2); P value, test for heterogeneity = .03.Conclusion(s): Overall, we did not observe a significant relation between red hair color and the rate of endometriosis, however this prospective cohort study suggests that the relation may differ by infertility status.
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