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Big U.S. study links breast
cancer to drinking
San Diego -
A large U.S. study has linked alcohol consumption to an increased
risk of the most common type of breast cancer in postmenopausal
women.
The analysis of data from more than
184,000 women is the biggest of three major studies to conclude that
drinking raises the risk of breast cancer for older women, Jasmine
Lew, a researcher at the National Cancer Institute and the study's
lead investigator said on Sunday.
The research found that women who
had one to two small drinks a day were 32 percent more likely to
develop a hormone-sensitive tumor. Three or more drinks a day raised
the risk by 51 per cent.
"Regardless of the type of alcohol,
the risk was evident," said Lew, presenting the findings here at a
meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.
About 70 percent of women who are
diagnosed with breast cancer have tumors that are positive for both
the estrogen and progesterone receptors.
Lew
said results from the NCI study lend credence to the theory that
alcohol's interference with the metabolism of estrogen raises the
risk of cancer.
She said it was too early to make
public health recommendations but said women should talk with their
doctors to assess risk factors and consider lifestyle changes.
Other studies have linked light
consumption of alcoholic drinks, especially red wine, to heart
protection.
Breast cancer is the second most
common cancer killer of women, after lung cancer. It will be
diagnosed in 1.2 million people globally this year and will kill
500,000. --
Reuters
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