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Smoking
Ups Risk for Less
Favorable Breast Cancer
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - Women who smoke may be at increased risk
of developing breast cancers that respond less favorably to treatment,
according to a joint Swedish and Danish research team.
In their study,
the investigators analyzed breast cancer tissue samples from 268
women out of a group of more than 10,000 women who had participated
in a study in Sweden. The women were followed for about 12 years.
From questionnaire data, the researchers determined that 35% of
the women were current smokers, according to the report published
in the current International Journal of Cancer.
Women who
smoked or had quit smoking at the time of the study had about
2.2 and 2.7 times the risk, respectively, of developing estrogen
receptor-negative tumors compared with women who had never smoked.
``We conclude
that smoking is associated with an increased occurrence of hormone
receptor-negative tumors,'' writes lead author Jonas Manjer of
Malm University Hospital and colleagues at Arhus University in
Denmark.
Hormone receptor-negative
tumors are generally believed to be less responsive to treatment.
Conversely, tumors that have estrogen receptors are associated
with a more favorable prognosis. In the study, researchers identified
whether the tumor samples had receptors for estrogen or progesterone.
Estrogen receptor-positive
tumors often respond to the anti-cancer drug tamoxifen, which
acts by limiting the tumor's supply of growth-promoting estrogen.
``Why smoking
would be associated with an increased occurrence of (estrogen/progesterone
receptor-negative) tumors can only be speculated. Smoking exerts
an anti-oestrogenic effect. Furthermore, tobacco smoke contains
several carcinogenic substances which, in animal experiments,
have been shown to cause breast cancer,'' the researchers write.
Further investigation
is needed to resolve the question, they conclude.
SOURCE:
International Journal of Cancer 2001;91:580-584.
Reference
Source 89
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