Mice study shows slight changes in 2 genes launches breast cancer development

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Scientists have made a new breakthrough in the fight against breast cancer.

Researchers at Georgetown Lombard Comprehensive Cancer Center have been able to show, in mice, how just a little adjustment in the expression of two common genes can promote the kind of cellular changes that led to breast cancer.

They say these tweaks likely mimic natural variation women have in expression of the two genes.

The researchers say that a readout of these two genes – estrogen receptor alpha and p53 – in healthy women could provide an “interacting biomarker” that might predict future breast cancer risk.

“It was believed that both of these genes only act once breast cancer had developed – p53 mutations are found in many cancers, including breast cancer, and the majority of women with breast cancer have over-expression of this common estrogen receptor,” says the study”s lead investigator, Priscilla A. Furth, a professor of oncology and medicine with Lombardi at Georgetown University Medical Center.

“What wasn”t known is that different levels of expression of these genes can help launch the cellular changes that lead to breast cancer.

“That suggests that testing women for their own variations in these genes might potentially give us a clue as to which women are at higher risk for development of breast cancer,” Furth adds.

In the study, the researchers developed mice in which one copy of the p53 gene was silenced (mice, and humans, inherit two copies, one from each parent), and tested the effect on what is known as development of preneoplasia, or early breast cancer progression.

The p53 gene, long called the ”guardian of the genome,” is known as a very powerful tumour suppressor because it regulates cell growth. Alterations to p53 are reported in 30-40 percent of human breast cancers, and this loss is linked to increased cancer aggressiveness, poor prognosis, and chemotherapy resistance.

The researchers also increased expression of the estrogen receptor by two-fold, an equivalent elevation sometimes seen in women. Almost 70 percent of women with breast cancer have estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer, meaning that the estrogen hormone is driving cell growth because it is binding to, in some cases, an over abundance of its receptors on the outside of breast cells.

Both mouse models showed significant precancerous changes in breast tissue. They then compared those effects with changes seen in mice that had one p53 gene as well as twice as much estrogen receptor expression, and found substantially higher evidence of early stage breast cancer progression.

“Normal breast tissue functioning requires a balance of cell growth and cell death, and in this study we found that both deregulated estrogen receptor function and p53 expression independently, and in combination, altering this balance and transforming cells,” Furth says.

The study has published in the May 15 issue of Cancer Research. (ANI)

Breakthrough in predicting invasive breast cancer risk

Washington, April 29 (ANI): Scientists have found a novel way to predict whether women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) – the most common form of non-invasive breast cancer – are at risk of developing more invasive tumours in later years.

According to the scientists, the discovery would give women with DCIS the opportunity to be more selective about their treatment.

“Women will have much more information, so they can better know their risk of developing invasive cancer. It will lead to a more personalized approach to treatment. As many as 44 percent of patients with DCIS may not require any further treatment, and can rely instead on surveillance,”” said lead author Karla Kerlikowske.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center followed the medical histories of 1,162 women aged 40 years and older who were diagnosed with DCIS and treated with lumpectomy.

They found that two factors were predictors of risk of developing invasive cancer within eight years after a diagnosis of DCIS: the method by which it was detected and expression of several biomarkers.

Findings showed that a breast lump that is diagnosed as DCIS was more predictive of a high risk of subsequent invasive cancer than DCIS diagnosis by mammography.

The study also found that different combinations of biomarkers measured on the initial DCIS tissue were associated with varying levels of risk of invasive cancer or DCIS.

These biomarkers include estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, Ki67 antigen, p53, p16, epidermal growth factor receptor-2, and cyclooxygenase-2. Women who express high levels of p16, cyclooxygenase-2 and Ki67 were more likely to develop invasive cancer after their initial DCIS diagnosis.

According to Kerlikowske, because of the research, physicians will now be able to predict whether a DCIS patient treated by lumpectomy only will subsequently develop invasive cancer, DCIS, or be at very low risk of developing further tumours.

The study has been reported online by the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. (ANI)

Study shows breast cancer risk factors differ among races

Washington, April 26 (ANI): A new American research suggests that breast cancer risk factors differ among races.

Breast cancer occurs more frequently in certain ethnic and racial groups, but the reasons behind these differences are not fully understood.

To investigate the issue, Lisa Hines, of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs led a study that considered how established breast cancer risk factors – including reproductive history, family history of breast cancer, menstrual history, hormone use, alcohol consumption, physical activity, height, and body mass index – might be involved in explaining some of the observed differences in the occurrence of breast cancer among racial and ethnic groups.

They studied breast cancer among women from the Southwest United States who were enrolled in the population-based, case-control 4-Corners Breast Cancer Study, which was designed to investigate factors that contribute to the difference in breast cancer incidence rates observed between Hispanic and non-Hispanic white women.

Prior studies have shown that non-Hispanic white women have a higher incidence of breast cancer than Hispanic women.

In this current study, the researchers found that 62 percent to 75 percent of breast cancer cases among non-Hispanic white women were attributed to known breast cancer risk factors, compared with only 7 to 36 percent of cases among Hispanic women.

Hispanic women were more likely to have characteristics associated with lower breast cancer risk, such as earlier age at first childbirth, having more children, shorter height, less hormone use, and less alcohol consumption.

Among premenopausal women, taller height and family history of breast cancer were associated with increased risk in non-Hispanic white women but were not among Hispanic women.

Among postmenopausal women, certain breast cancer risk factors in non-Hispanic whites (such as recent hormone therapy use and younger age at menarche) had no or only weak associations with breast cancer in Hispanics.

These findings suggest that many of the risk factors studied to date explain fewer of the breast cancer cases that arise in Hispanic women compared with non-Hispanic white women.

Dr. Hines said: “These differences are likely to contribute to disparities in breast cancer incidence rates, and could potentially reflect differences in breast cancer development among these ethnic groups.”

For instance, ethnic differences in genetic and environmental or lifestyle factors may affect individuals” susceptibility to the development of breast cancer.

The authors noted that the study”s findings also indicate that the use of models to estimate a woman”s risk of breast cancer that were developed from studies among non-Hispanic white populations need to be evaluated among other ethnic and racial populations.

The study has appeared early online in Cancer, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. (ANI)

Decreased breast density over time means decreased breast cancer risk

Washington, Apr 21 (ANI): A decrease in breast density, depicted via the proportion of fibroglandular tissue on the mammogram image, over time indicates a decreased risk of breast cancer, according to a study.

Researchers from the Mayo Clinic campus in Minnesota found a 28 percent reduced risk of developing breast cancer in women whose breasts decreased in density, as seen from two different mammograms taken an average of six years apart, compared to women whose breast density did not change.

Dr. Celine Vachon, study”s lead investigator, said that two measures of breast density may, therefore, provide additional information for assessing breast cancer risk.

However, she added that this information is not ready for use in clinical practice to inform breast cancer risk.

“Replication of these findings in other studies will be important. Also, improved and standardized measurements of breast density are needed for the assessment of changes in density,” she said.

The current assessment available in most clinical settings is BI-RADS, Breast Imaging-Reporting and Data System, which is relatively unsophisticated when it comes to measuring breast density and was not intended for this purpose, said Vachon.

“There is a lot of ongoing work aimed at improving measures of density, so that situation should change,” she added.

This study was drawn from the Mammography Health Study, which enrolled 19,924 women who were free of breast cancer, had screening mammograms performed at Mayo Clinic between 2003 and 2006 and resided in Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin.

From this large group, the researchers selected participants who had at least one additional screening mammogram prior to enrolment, and then looked at clinic and tumour registries in the three Midwestern states to determine if any of these women developed breast cancer after enrolling in the study.

Measures of mammographic density were obtained from the two mammograms, an average of six years apart, for the approximately 1,900 women randomly sampled from the cohort, and from all 219 individuals who were diagnosed with breast cancer during follow-up.

The researchers found that women who developed breast cancer were less likely to experience a decrease in density in a second mammogram.

After adjusting for other potential factors contributing to breast cancer development, the researchers found that women who decreased one BI-RADS category or more over an average of six years were at 28 percent reduced risk of developing breast cancer, compared to women whose density was unchanged.

“We know that breast density can change with time, as evidenced by decreases seen with women going through menopause or using the breast cancer preventive drug tamoxifen and increases seen with postmenopausal hormone therapy use. Our results suggest that decreases in density may translate to decreased breast cancer risk,” said Vachon.

The study was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) 101st Annual Meeting 2010. (ANI)

Gaining a pound a year after age 20 raises women”s breast cancer risk

Washington, Apr 21 (ANI): Women who gain a pound or two a year after age 20 increase their risk for postmenopausal breast cancer, says a new study.

The research was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research 101st Annual Meeting 2010.

To reach the conclusion, researchers analyzed information from 72,007 women in the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial cohort, who were 55 to 74 years old at study entry.

The analysis included 3,677 cases of postmenopausal breast cancer, which makes this one of the larger studies of its kind, according to the researchers.

The boffins observed the strongest associations among women who had never used menopausal hormone therapy; results were shown only for this group of women.

“Compared with women who maintained approximately the same BMI, those who had an increase of 5 kg/m2 or more between age 20 and study entry had a nearly twofold increased risk of breast cancer,” said Laura Sue, M.P.H., a cancer research fellow at the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

Results showed that nearly 57 percent of the study population”s BMI increased 5 kg/m2 or more between age 20 and study entry. A BMI increase of 5 kg/m2 is equivalent to a woman of average height, 5”4″, gaining approximately 30 pounds.

Women who reported a BMI increase of 5 kg/m2 or more between age 20 and 50 were at an 88 percent increased risk of developing postmenopausal breast cancer, compared with women who reported a stable BMI. For women who reported a BMI increase of 5 kg/m2 or more between age 50 and study entry, risk increased 56 percent, compared with women who maintained BMI. BMI gain both before and after age 50 independently contribute to increased risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. (ANI)

Junk food during pregnancy ‘raises breast cancer risk for kids, grandkids’

Washington, Apr 20 (ANI): Pregnant women who gorge on junk food could be putting themselves at an increased risk of breast cancer that is passed down generations, say researchers.

In their rat-based study, researchers at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center showed that pregnant females that ate a high fat diet not only increased breast cancer risk in their female daughters but also in that daughter”s offspring – the “granddaughters.”

Details of the study will be presented at the AACR 101st Annual Meeting 2010.

The researchers say they don”t know why this risk is passed on through two generations, but they believe it occurs through as-yet unknown “epigenetic” changes that result in an increase in terminal end buds in the breast tissue – an increase that apparently can then be passed on through generations.

These buds are believed to be the structures where breast cancer can develop, and having more of these structures seems to increase breast cancer risk, says the study”s lead investigator, Sonia de Assis, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in Leena Hilakivi-Clarke”s laboratory at Lombardi. “That is our theory, but we really don”t know how it is happening – just yet.”

The researchers add that while the grandmother ate a diet that was 43 percent fat, she didn”t eat more calories than a control population of rats, and both her daughters and granddaughters ate a normal chow.

The researchers also found that the risk appears to not only extend from mother to daughter and granddaughter, but also from mother to son to granddaughter.

“The implications from this study are that pregnant mothers need to eat a well balanced diet because they may be affecting the future health of their daughters and granddaughters,” says de Assis. (ANI)

Vitamin, calcium supplements ‘can reduce breast cancer risk’

Washington, April 19 (ANI): A new study has suggested that vitamins and calcium supplements can reduce the risk of breast cancer.

The supplements are thought to help cells repair damaged DNA using a process that involves more than 200 proteins.

“It is not an immediate effect. You don”t take a vitamin today and your breast cancer risk is reduced tomorrow. However, we did see a long-term effect in terms of breast cancer reduction,” said Jaime Matta, professor in the Ponce School of Medicine in Puerto Rico.

“This process involves at least five separate pathways and is critical for maintaining genomic stability. When the DNA is not repaired, it leads to mutation that leads to cancer,” Matta added.

The study included 268 women with breast cancer and 457 healthy controls. Women were more likely to have breast cancer if they were older, had a family history of breast cancer, had no history of breastfeeding and had lower DNA repair capacity.

Vitamin supplements appeared to reduce the risk of breast cancer by about 30 percent. Calcium supplements reduced the risk of breast cancer by 40 percent.

After controlling for the level of DNA repair capacity, calcium supplements were no longer as protective, but the link between vitamin supplements and breast cancer reduction remained.

“We”re not talking about mega doses of these vitamins and calcium supplements, so this is definitely one way to reduce risk,” said Matta.

The study was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research 101st Annual Meeting 2010. (ANI)

Vitamin, calcium supplements ‘can reduce breast cancer risk’

Washington, April 19 (ANI): A new study has suggested that vitamins and calcium supplements can reduce the risk of breast cancer.

The supplements are thought to help cells repair damaged DNA using a process that involves more than 200 proteins.

“It is not an immediate effect. You don”t take a vitamin today and your breast cancer risk is reduced tomorrow. However, we did see a long-term effect in terms of breast cancer reduction,” said Jaime Matta, professor in the Ponce School of Medicine in Puerto Rico.

“This process involves at least five separate pathways and is critical for maintaining genomic stability. When the DNA is not repaired, it leads to mutation that leads to cancer,” Matta added.

The study included 268 women with breast cancer and 457 healthy controls. Women were more likely to have breast cancer if they were older, had a family history of breast cancer, had no history of breastfeeding and had lower DNA repair capacity.

Vitamin supplements appeared to reduce the risk of breast cancer by about 30 percent. Calcium supplements reduced the risk of breast cancer by 40 percent.

After controlling for the level of DNA repair capacity, calcium supplements were no longer as protective, but the link between vitamin supplements and breast cancer reduction remained.

“We”re not talking about mega doses of these vitamins and calcium supplements, so this is definitely one way to reduce risk,” said Matta.

The study was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research 101st Annual Meeting 2010. (ANI)

Chemical exposure before mid-30s ‘ups breast cancer risk’

Washington, April 1 (ANI): Women exposed to chemicals and pollutants in the workplace before they reach mid-30s may have a higher risk of developing breast cancer later in life, says a new research.

The study revealed that women exposed to synthetic fibres and petroleum products during the course of their work are most at risk.

The findings are based on more than 1100 women, 556 of whom were diagnosed with breast cancer in 1996/7 in Montreal, Canada, when aged between 50 and 75 and who had gone through the menopause.

The other 613 women, who were matched for age and date of diagnosis, had a range of other cancers, and were intended to act as a comparison group.

An expert team of chemists and industrial hygienists then set about investigating the women”s levels of exposure to around 300 different substances throughout the course of their employment history.

After taking account of the usual factors associated with an increased risk of breast cancer, the analysis indicated a link between occupational exposure to several of these substances.

Compared with the comparison group, this risk peaked for exposures before the age of 36, and was magnified with each additional decade of exposure before this age.

This resulted in women occupationally exposed to acrylic fibres running a seven-fold risk of breast cancer, while those exposed to nylon fibres almost doubled their risk.

The study has been published in Occupational and Environmental Medicine. (ANI)

Aspirin a day ‘cuts breast cancer risk’

Washington, March 24 (ANI): A new study has shown that postmenopausal women who take aspirin and other analgesics (known as painkillers) regularly have lower estrogen levels, which could contribute to a decreased risk of breast or ovarian cancer.

“We observed some significant inverse associations between concentrations of several estrogens and the use of aspirin, aspirin plus non-aspirin nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and all analgesics combined,” said Margaret A. Gates, Sc.D., research fellow at the Channing Laboratory at Brigham and Women”s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

“Our results suggest that among postmenopausal women, regular users of aspirin and other analgesics may have lower estrogen levels than non-users,” Gates added.

Gates and colleagues examined the association between use of aspirin, NSAIDs and acetaminophen and concentrations of estrogens and androgens among 740 postmenopausal women who participated in the Nurses” Health Study.

Frequency of all analgesic use was inversely associated with estradiol, free estradiol, estrone sulfate and the ratio of estradiol to testosterone.

Average estradiol levels were 10.5 percent lower among women who regularly used aspirin or non-aspirin NSAIDs. Similarly, free estradiol levels were 10.6 percent lower and estrone sulfate levels were 11.1 percent lower among regular users of aspirin or other NSAIDs.

Among regular users of any analgesic (aspirin, NSAIDs or acetaminophen), levels of these hormones were 15.2 percent, 12.9 percent and 12.6 percent lower, respectively, according to Gates.

These study results are published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. (ANI)

Rare ATM gene mutations, plus radiation, ups second breast cancer risk

Washington, Mar 20 (ANI): Rare mutations in the ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) gene, combined with radiation exposure, might put a woman more at risk of developing a second cancer in the opposite breast, according to a study.

Breast cancer survivors are at increased risk of developing a second cancer in the other, or contralateral breast, compared to women who have not had breast cancer.

The ATM gene is known to play a role in cells” response to DNA damage caused by ionizing radiation, another breast cancer risk factor.

However, it is still unknown if women who carry ATM mutations are especially susceptible to radiation-induced breast cancer.

Thus, Dr. Jonine Bernstein, M.D., of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, and colleagues, compared ATM mutations among women who had developed a second cancer in the contralateral breast to mutations in those who had a cancer in only one breast.

The women were participants in the Women”s Environment, Cancer, and Radiation Epidemiology (WECARE) Study, an international case–control study.

There were 708 case subjects—women with contralateral cancer—and 1,397 control subjects who did not have a second cancer but were similar to the case subjects in other respects, such as age and race.

All the women underwent full mutation screening of the entire ATM gene.

For those who had received radiation therapy, the researchers estimated the amount of radiation to the contralateral breast using treatment records and radiation measurements.

Women who carried certain rare ATM mutations–missense variants predicted to be deleterious–and who also received radiation had a higher risk of contralateral breast cancer compared with women who did not have these mutations and had not had radiation.

The difference was statistically significant.

Women with both a mutation and radiation exposure also had a higher risk than women who had a mutation but no radiation exposure.

The authors noted that the missense variants were found in fewer than 1% of study participants.

They concluded that breast cancer survivors who do have such variants and who also received radiation may be at an elevated risk for a contralateral breast cancer.

“However, the rarity of these deleterious missense variants in human populations implies that ATM mutations could account for only a small portion of second primary breast cancers,” they wrote.

The study has been published online in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. (ANI)

3 drugs found to reduce breast cancer risk, have distinct side effects

Washington, September 16 (ANI): Three drugs have been found to cut women’s chances of contracting breast cancer, but each of them has distinct potential harms of its own, says a report.

Issued by HHS’ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the report reveals that the three drugs are tamoxifen, raloxifene, and tibolone.

The comparative effectiveness review found that all three drugs significantly reduce invasive breast cancer in midlife and older women, but that benefits and adverse effects can vary depending on the drug and the patient.

“Taking medicine to avoid breast cancer in the first place is an attractive notion, but the decision to do so must be made by patients in consultation with their clinicians with benefit of the best evidence available. These drugs are not necessarily for everyone. This report sheds important light on their advantages and potential harms,” said AHRQ Director Dr. Carolyn M. Clancy.

The AHRQ report compared tamoxifen with another SERM, raloxifene, which is primarily used to prevent and treat osteoporosis and was approved by the FDA for breast cancer risk reduction in 2007.

A third drug, tibolone, which has not been approved by the FDA for use in the US but is commonly used in other countries to treat menopausal symptoms and osteoporosis, was also included in the study.

The report found that all three drugs reduce the occurrence of breast cancer, but have various side effects.

The most common side effects for tamoxifen are flushing and other vasomotor symptoms like sweats and hot flashes, vaginal discharge, and other vaginal symptoms such as itching or dryness.

For raloxifene, side effects include vasomotor symptoms and leg cramps. And for tibolone, side effects include vaginal bleeding.

The report also found that each drug carried the risk of adverse effects, and that tamoxifen increases risk for endometrial cancer, hysterectomies, and cataracts compared with the other drugs.

Tamoxifen and raloxifene increase the risk of blood clots, although tamoxifen’s risk is greater. Tibolone carries an increased risk of stroke.

The report also examined the drugs’ effectiveness and harms based on factors like age, menopausal status, oestrogen use, and family history of breast cancer and sought to identify the kinds of women who might be good candidates for prevention therapy, although the evidence is limited in this area.

The report called for more research to more clearly identify characteristics of patients who would benefit from these drugs while suffering the least harm. (ANI)

Second child within a year ‘increases breast cancer risk’

London, Sept 14 (ANI): Having a second child within a year of the first birth can increase a woman’s risk of developing breast cancer, finds a new study.

The research, involving 30,000 women each of whom had produced five or more children, has shown that those with a gap of less than 12 month were 5.2 times more likely to develop the advanced ductal breast cancer than women who had a gap of three or more years.

Although it is unclear that why the risk increases, researchers believe hormones might be involved.

Alternatively, other risk factors may have influenced the results, including being overweight, and whether or not the mother chooses to breast-feed.

“Women who had their first two births close together should not be worried by these findings because the study’s results are not conclusive,” the Telegraph quoted Josephine Querido, senior science information officer at Cancer Research UK, as saying.

“The researchers looked at a very specific group of women – those who had a specific type of breast cancer, who had advanced tumours, who were under 50, and who had at least five children. In studies like this, dividing the group of people you’re looking at into lots of smaller groups makes it likely that you’ll find a positive result in one of the subgroups just by chance.

“For all women, it’s important to go to the GP if they spot any unusual changes in their breast, and to go for screening when invited,” Querido added.

The study appears in the British Journal of Cancer. (ANI)

Obesity, booze and smoking increase second breast cancer risk

Washington, Sept 9 (ANI): Obesity, alcohol use and smoking significantly increase the risk of second breast cancer among breast cancer survivors, says a new study.

The study by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has been published online Sept. 8 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

“We found that obese women had a 50 percent increased risk, women who consumed at least one alcoholic drink per day had a 90 percent increased risk, and women who were current smokers had a 120 percent increased risk of developing a second breast cancer,” said lead author Christopher I. Li, M.D., Ph.D., an associate member of the Public Health Sciences Division at the Hutchinson Center.

The research suggests that current smokers who imbibe at least seven drinks a week may be at particularly high risk of second breast cancer.

“Our study results afford breast cancer survivors three ways to potentially reduce their risk of second cancers: Stay at a normal weight, don’t smoke and drink in moderation,” he said.

Both obesity and alcohol use are associated with increased levels of circulating estrogen, and this is thought to be the primary means through which they confer an increased risk of breast cancer, since estrogen can fuel breast cancer growth. The link between smoking and breast cancer may be attributed to carcinogens in tobacco smoke.

To reach the conclusion, Li and colleagues assessed body mass index, alcohol use and smoking status in 365 women who were diagnosed with both a first and a second breast cancer, and compared them to 726 matched controls diagnosed with only a first breast cancer.

Obesity, alcohol use and smoking data were collected from medical record reviews and participant interviews. The study participants, all from the Seattle/Puget Sound region, were first diagnosed with breast cancer between the ages of 40 and 79. (ANI)

Smoking, overweighing up breast cancer risk

Washington, September 2 (ANI): A study conducted in Canada has reinforced the correlation between being overweight, smoking and breast cancer.

Published in the Journal of Cancer Epidemiology, the study is unique because it did not include subjects who were diagnosed for BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutations, which predispose women to breast cancer.

The study entirely focused on lifestyle factors like smoking, exercise, nutrition and weight.

All women analysed in the study were direct ancestors of the first French colonists.

“To our knowledge, this is the first study conducted on a sample of women without BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutations, which are often found in French-Canadian women,” said lead researcher Vishnee Bissonauth, a graduate of the Universite de Montreal’s Department of Nutrition, and a researcher at the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center.

The study found that weight gains after the age of 20 increased the risk of breast cancer.

Where the weight gain was more than 15.5 kilos, the risk was found to increase by an average of 68 percent.

Risk increases depending on how late in life the weight gain occurs, according to the study.

Women who gained more than 10 kilos after age 30, or more than 5.5 kilos after age 40, were found to be almost twice as likely to suffer from breast cancer as a those whose weight was stable.

The study showed that the risk tripled if the body mass index was at its maximum after age 50.

Smoking a pack a day for nine years was also found to increase breast cancer risks by 59 percent.

Though the impact of smoking seemed to decrease for menopausal women, it remained at 50 percent.

Bissonauth stressed the need for more research into the correlation between smoking and breast cancer.

The researchers revealed that moderate physical activity appeared to decrease cancer risks by 52 percent for pre-menopausal and post-menopausal women.

The correlation was also observed for women who did intense physical activity, but the difference was not significant, said the lead researcher.

That finding, said Bissonauth, may be down to the fact that women who did moderate physical activity were more likely to do it regularly, while those who did intense physical activity were likely to quit after a few weeks.

“Cancer is a complex disease and can be latent for several years. Therefore, it is important to work on the factors we can control and to lead a healthy lifestyle, which means watching one’s weight, avoid smoking and doing regular exercise,” said Bissonauth. (ANI)

Smoking, overweighing up breast cancer risk

Washington, September 2 (ANI): A study conducted in Canada has reinforced the correlation between being overweight, smoking and breast cancer.

Published in the Journal of Cancer Epidemiology, the study is unique because it did not include subjects who were diagnosed for BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutations, which predispose women to breast cancer.

The study entirely focused on lifestyle factors like smoking, exercise, nutrition and weight.

All women analysed in the study were direct ancestors of the first French colonists.

“To our knowledge, this is the first study conducted on a sample of women without BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutations, which are often found in French-Canadian women,” said lead researcher Vishnee Bissonauth, a graduate of the Universite de Montreal’s Department of Nutrition, and a researcher at the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center.

The study found that weight gains after the age of 20 increased the risk of breast cancer.

Where the weight gain was more than 15.5 kilos, the risk was found to increase by an average of 68 percent.

Risk increases depending on how late in life the weight gain occurs, according to the study.

Women who gained more than 10 kilos after age 30, or more than 5.5 kilos after age 40, were found to be almost twice as likely to suffer from breast cancer as a those whose weight was stable.

The study showed that the risk tripled if the body mass index was at its maximum after age 50.moking a pack a day for nine years was also found to increase breast cancer risks by 59 percent.

Though the impact of smoking seemed to decrease for menopausal women, it remained at 50 percent.

Bissonauth stressed the need for more research into the correlation between smoking and breast cancer.

The researchers revealed that moderate physical activity appeared to decrease cancer risks by 52 percent for pre-menopausal and post-menopausal women.

The correlation was also observed for women who did intense physical activity, but the difference was not significant, said the lead researcher.

That finding, said Bissonauth, may be down to the fact that women who did moderate physical activity were more likely to do it regularly, while those who did intense physical activity were likely to quit after a few weeks.

“Cancer is a complex disease and can be latent for several years. Therefore, it is important to work on the factors we can control and to lead a healthy lifestyle, which means watching one’s weight, avoid smoking and doing regular exercise,” said Bissonauth. (ANI)

Healthy lifestyle simplest, best way to cut breast cancer risk

London, Sept 1 (ANI): A healthy lifestyle, including keeping weight down, exercising for 30 minutes a day and limiting alcohol to a single drink a day, is the simplest and best way for women to cut the risk of breast cancer, says a new study.

The study by the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF ) has found the strongest evidence yet that lifestyle is linked to the risk of developing breast cancer, reports The Times.

The research came to the conclusion after showing that more than four out of ten cases could be prevented if women exercised, limited their alcohol intake and maintained a healthy weight.

Breastfeeding also helps to reduce the risk of developing the disease, the scientists at Imperial College London said.

Arlene Wilkie, director of research and policy at Breast Cancer Campaign, said: “This review provides further evidence that maintaining a healthy weight throughout life along with regular exercise will reduce the risk of health problems such as breast cancer, heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and arthritis.” (ANI)

Long-term tamoxifen use may up aggressive breast cancer risk

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Tamoxifen drug, commonly used for treating breast cancer, can actually increase the severity of the disease, finds a new study.

The researchers showed that long-term tamoxifen use increases risk of an aggressive, hard to treat type of second breast cancer.

Lead researcher Dr Christopher Li at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre compared the breast-cancer patients who received the estrogen-blocking drug tamoxifen to those who did not and found that while the drug was associated with a 60 percent reduction in estrogen receptor-positive, or ER positive, second breast cancer – the more common type, which is responsive to estrogen-blocking therapy – it also appeared to increase the risk of ER negative second cancer by 440 percent.

“This is of concern, given the poorer prognosis of ER-negative tumors, which are also more difficult to treat,” said Li.

The findings from the new study supports Li’s earlier research suggesting a link between long-term tamoxifen use and an increased risk of ER-negative second cancers.

“The earlier study had a number of limitations. For example, we did not have information on the duration of tamoxifen therapy the women received,” said Li.

“The current study is larger, is based on much more detailed data, and is the first study specifically designed to determine whether tamoxifen use among breast cancer survivors influences their risk of different types of second breast cancers,” the expert added.

However, Li insists that while the study confirmed a strong association between long-term tamoxifen therapy and an increased risk of ER-negative second cancer, it does not suggest that breast cancer survivors should stop taking hormone therapy to prevent a second cancer.

The findings are published in the journal Cancer Research. (ANI)

Turmeric root cuts breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women

Washington, July 14 (ANI): Curcumin, a popular Indian spice derived from the turmeric root, can help reduce cancer risk among postmenopausal women exposed to hormone replacement therapy, according to University of Missouri researchers.

Studies conducted in the past have suggested that a combined oestrogen and progestin hormone replacement therapy increases postmenopausal women’s risk of developing progestin-accelerated breast tumours.

“The results of our study show that women could potentially take curcumin to protect themselves from developing progestin-accelerated tumours,” said Salman Hyder, the Zalk Endowed Professorship in Tumor Angiogenesis and professor of biomedical sciences in the College of Veterinary Medicine and the Dalton Cardiovascular Research Centre.

The study conducted using animal model showed that curcumin delayed the first appearance, decreased incidence and reduced multiplicity of progestin-accelerated tumours.

Curcumin also prevented the appearance of gross morphological abnormalities in the mammary glands.

The research team previously showed that progestin accelerates the development of certain tumors by increasing production of a molecule called VEGF that helps supply blood to the tumour.

And blocking the production of VEGF could potentially reduce the proliferation of breast cancer cells.

Hyder said that curcumin inhibits progestin-induced VEGF secretion from breast cancer cells.

“Curcumin and other potential anti-angiogenic compounds should be tested further as dietary chemopreventive agents in women already exposed to hormone replacement therapy containing estrogen and progestin in an effort to decrease or delay the risk of breast cancer associated with combined hormone replacement therapy,” Hyder said.

The study has been published in Menopause, a journal of the North American Menopause Society. (ANI)

Migraines linked to reduced breast cancer risk

Washington, July 10 (ANI): For women who suffer from migraines, here’s some good news: New study shows that your risk of breast cancer may be reduced by as much as 26 percent.

And no matter what a woman’s age or what migraine triggers a woman might be avoiding, the risk of breast cancer is still reduced, according to the study, led by Christopher I. Li, M.D., Ph.D., a breast-cancer epidemiologist and associate member of the Hutchinson Center’s Public Health Sciences Division.

Li led the first-of-its-kind study linking migraines with breast cancer risk reduction that was published last November.

This time researchers found that the risk reduction remained statistically similar regardless of a woman’s menopausal status, her age at migraine diagnosis, use of prescription migraine medications or whether she avoided known migraine “triggers” such as alcohol consumption, smoking and taking hormone replacements. These triggers are also well-established breast cancer risk factors.

Some key differences between this study and the initial one that discovered the link include: the sample size was more than four times larger this time – more than 4,500 cases and controls versus about 1,000 each in the first study – and was more diverse geographically, drawing women from five metropolitan areas instead of only one.

“From an epidemiological perspective, having a larger and more diverse study in its underlying population helps in replicating the finding,” Li said.

The age range of women studied was wider this time, 34-64 years of age versus 55-74 years old.

“We were able to look at whether this association was seen among both pre-menopausal and post menopausal women. In breast cancer this is relevant because there are certain risk factors that are different between older and younger women. In this study we saw the same reduction in breast cancer risk associated with a migraine history regardless of age,” Li said.

Researchers were able to ascertain whether women in the study had lifestyle behaviours that are known migraine triggers – alcohol consumption, smoking and taking hormone replacement therapy.

Researchers posited that perhaps women who had migraines drank and smoked less and didn’t take hormone replacements.

“But in this study we looked at women who never drank, never smoked and who also didn’t use hormones and found the same association within each of those groups, suggesting that the association between migraine and reduced breast cancer risk may be independent of those other factors and may stand alone as a protective factor,” he said.

What remains unknown is how migraine confers its apparent protection against breast cancer.

“We know that migraine is definitely related to hormones and that’s why we started looking at this in the first place. We have different ideas about what may be going on but it’s unclear exactly what the biological mechanisms are,” Li said.

The study appears in the July 2009 issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention. (ANI)