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Study Ties Stress to Breast Cancer
Excerpt
by Amanda Gardner,
HealthDay
Contrary to several previous studies,
new research out of Sweden claims stress can increase a woman's
chance of developing breast cancer.
But even the study's lead author,
Dr. Osten Helgesson, cautions the findings left many things unknown,
including how much stress might signal danger.
Helgesson, a researcher at Sahlgrenska
Academy in Goteborg, Sweden, presented his findings Sept. 24 at
the European Cancer Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark.
One of the problems with studying
stress in relation to cancer is that the effects of stress don't
manifest that quickly. While there have been some studies that
show stress makes a difference in the functioning of the immune
system, no one knows how that connects with the development of
cancer, says Frank Baker, a psychologist and vice president for
behavioral research at the American Cancer Society.
"There has been a belief that
breast cancer is related to stress for hundreds of years, if not
thousands of years," Baker says. "We have not been able
to establish conclusive linkages between experiences of stress
and the occurrence of breast cancer in studies that are prospective."
The current study is a prospective
one, which is one of its strengths. Prospective means that researchers
followed a group of healthy women going forward, as opposed to
selecting a group of women with breast cancer and delving into
their past experiences.
Helgesson and his colleagues followed
1,462 Swedish women, aged 38 to 60, for 24 years. In 1968 and
1991, the women had physical exams, filled out questionnaires,
and were asked by a physician whether they had been under stress
for a month or longer. The definition of stress in this case included
tension, fear, anxiety or sleep disturbances connected with conflicts
in the family or at work. The women had follow-up examinations
in 1974-75, 1980-81 and 1992-93, but were not asked about stress
again. Complete data was available for 1,350 of the women.
The stress experience related to
this study was during the five-year period leading up to the 1968-69
examination.
Women who said they were experiencing
stress during this period had about double the risk of developing
breast cancer than women who reported that they were not stressed.
The absolute numbers, however, were low: 24 of the stressed women
developed breast cancer and 432 did not. Of the unstressed women,
23 developed breast cancer and 871 did not.
The study authors say they adjusted
for confounding factors such as alcohol consumption, smoking,
body mass index, education, family history of breast cancer and
more.
Overall, all the women still fell
in the ballpark of low risk, says Dr. Paul Tartter, a breast surgeon
at St. Luke's/Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York City. "This
group of women have a relatively low risk overall compared to
American women," he says.
The women in the study also did
not develop cancer at an earlier age than would be expected in
the population at large.
Although parts of the methodology
are strong (namely, the fact that it is a prospective study),
there are also weaknesses. As the lead author himself points out,
the questionnaire used, for instance, has not been validated as
an accurate way of measuring stress.
"It's not a standardized measure
of stress," Baker adds. "This research would need to
be replicated with better measures of stress."
"It's intriguing," Tartter
adds. "And it's what we all want to hear, that stress contributes
to cancer, because we can control stress."
More information
Find more on psychological stress
and cancer at Britain's
National Cancer Institute or the U.S.
National Cancer Institute.
Reference
Source 101
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