Dairy Intake and Uterine Fibroid Development: A Prospective Study
Recommended Citation
Actkins KV, Wise LA, Wegienka GR, Jukic AMZ, Baird DD, Harmon QE. Dairy Intake and Uterine Fibroid Development: A Prospective Study. J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2026.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-18-2026
Publication Title
Journal of women's health (2002)
Keywords
dairy; fibroid growth; fibroid incidence; uterine leiomyoma
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dairy intake has been associated with lower fibroid incidence in some studies, but none used standardized serial ultrasound screening to detect fibroids.
METHODS: We examined dairy intake and fibroid development in the Study of Environment, Lifestyle and Fibroids, a prospective cohort (2010-2018) of 1,610 Black/African American women with no prior clinical diagnosis of fibroids. At the baseline, participants completed a Food Frequency Questionnaire about their intake of daily milk, cheese, yogurt, and total dairy. At three follow-up visits, conducted approximately every 20 months, participants updated their cow's milk intake. Incident cases were those with ultrasound-detected fibroids among those fibroid-free at the baseline ultrasound. We used Cox proportional hazards models to estimate adjusted hazard ratios for fibroid incidence with 95% confidence intervals (CI). For fibroid growth, we calculated the change in log-volume from one visit to the next.
RESULTS: The majority (83%) of participants consumed < 0.5 cups of milk/day. Neither dairy nor milk intake was appreciably associated with fibroid incidence. However, the baseline total dairy consumption of ≥1 versus < 1 cup/day was associated with a 19% decrease (95% CI = -34%, -0.8%) in fibroid growth over the first 20-month interval. The baseline milk intake of ≥0.5 versus < 0.5 cups/day was associated with a 26% decrease in growth (95% CI = -39%, -11%) in the same interval. We did not observe similar associations between time-varying milk intake and growth over other study intervals.
CONCLUSIONS: The data from this prospective ultrasound study provide some evidence that dairy intake may reduce fibroid growth.
PubMed ID
41851009
ePublication
ePub ahead of print
First Page
15409996261428014
Last Page
15409996261428014
