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Smokers Have Higher Breast Cancer Risk
Women who smoke may have a far higher risk of breast cancer than
those who do not, or those who once smoked but quit, U.S. researchers
reported.
California women who said they
were current smokers had a 30 percent greater incidence of breast
cancer than non-smokers, the researchers reported in this week's
issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Peggy Reynolds and colleagues at
the California Department of Health Services studied 16,544 women
between 1996 and 2000.
During that time, 2,005 of them
were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer.
Women who described themselves
as current smokers had a 30 percent higher risk of being among
the cancer patients. Those who started smoking before age 20,
who began smoking at least five years before their first full-term
pregnancy, and who smoked the most or the longest all had higher
risks.
Women who had once smoked but quit
did not have a higher risk of breast cancer, Reynolds' team found.
Passive smoking also did not seem to raise breast cancer risk
in the California study.
Breast cancer is the third most
common cause of cancer death in the United States, after lung
cancer and colon cancer. It killed 40,000 women in 2003, according
to the American Cancer Society.
The researchers said their study
helps shed light on an area where studies have had conflicting
results. They now plan to run genetic tests on the women in the
study to see if a genetic mutation may make certain women more
susceptible to the cancer-causing effects of tobacco smoke.
Tobacco smoke carries several known
carcinogens, and elements of tobacco smoke have been found in
the breast fluid of smokers, they noted.
But tobacco could also affect estrogen
in ways that, theoretically at least, could lower breast cancer
risk. The study tends to refute that notion.
Reference
Source 89
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