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Animal Fats Linked with Breast Cancer
Excerpt
By Maggie Fox, Reuters Health
Young women who eat more red meat and
full-fat dairy products such as cheese may be raising their risk
of breast cancer, researchers reported on Tuesday.
They
said their study, published in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, provides yet another incentive for women to shun fatty
foods and consume fresh fruits, vegetables and whole grains.
"When we compared the women in
the highest fat intake group with women in lowest intake group,
those with the highest intake had a 33 percent greater risk of
invasive breast cancer," Eunyoung Cho of Brigham and Women's Hospital
and Harvard Medical School said in a telephone interview.
Cho said her study was unique because
it included women who had not reached menopause. Breast cancer
takes years to develop, although it usually shows up after menopause,
and factors early in a woman's life may be important.
Women most at risk of breast cancer
obtained, on average, 23 percent of calories from animal fat,
versus 12 percent in the lowest-risk group.
Vegetable fats such as olive oil
did not affect a woman's risk. "We found that it was not total
fat but certain types of fat that was related to breast cancer
risk," Cho said.
The study of more than 90,000 women
aged 26 to 46 was taken from the Nurses' Health Study, in which
volunteers answer regular questionnaires about diet and lifestyle
and that data is analyzed by researchers who track the women's
health.
Over the eight years of the study,
714 women developed invasive breast cancer.
"Overall, we observed that there
was a higher risk of breast cancer among women who ate foods rich
in animal fat such as red meat, cheese, ice cream and butter during
their 20s, 30s and 40s," Cho said.
CONTROVERSIAL AREA
"In an area of breast cancer research
that has yielded often starkly different findings, we have illustrated
that there may be stronger support for lowering overall animal
fat intake, especially during a woman's early adult life," she
added.
Hydrogenated oils, hardened to
be more like butter and lard, clog arteries just like butter and
lard do. Last week the U.S. government said it would require food
manufacturers to label foods with trans-fats -- found in animal
and hydrogenated fat.
Researchers have long noted that
the rates of certain cancers are higher in the West than in Asia.
But it has not been clear whether that is due to what people eat
-- such as animal fat and dairy products -- or what they do not
eat -- perhaps soy, vegetables or other products.
Cho, an epidemiologist who studies
patterns of disease as well as a nutritionist, said it is not
clear how animal fat may cause cancer.
"Fat intake in general has been
hypothesized to increase circulating hormone levels such estrogen
levels," she said.
Cooked red meat contains cancer-causing
agents and is also liked with colon cancer.
Eating less meat and full-fat dairy
can also help a woman reduce her risk of heart disease, the No.
1 killer of both men and women in the industrialized world, Cho
said.
According to the World Health Organization,
more than 1.2 million people will be diagnosed with breast cancer
this year. Breast cancer will kill more than 40,000 Americans
this year.
Reference
Source 89
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