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Passive smoking is breast cancer
risk factor
New York -
The results of studies "with thorough passive smoking exposure
assessment" indicate that passive smoking raises the risk of breast
cancer, especially in premenopausal women, to a similar degree as
active smoking.
Dr. Kenneth C. Johnson, of the Public
Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, examined the association
between breast cancer risk and passive and active smoking in an
analysis of 19 published studies that met basic quality criteria. The
results are published in the International Journal of Cancer.
The investigator calculated the risk
of breast cancer in life-long non-smokers with regular exposure to
passive smoke, and for women who smoked compared with women who were
never regularly exposed to tobacco smoke.
Long-term regular exposure to passive
smoking was associated with an overall 27-percent increased risk of
breast cancer among women who had never smoked.
"More importantly, among the studies
that collected the most complete measures of passive smoking, the
observed breast cancer risk was increased by 90 percent," Johnson said
in an interview with Reuters Health. "Studies with less complete
second-hand smoke measures only observed an eight-percent increase in
risk."
"The relationship with premenopausal
breast cancer risk was stronger -- elevated 68 percent with long-term
regular passive smoking exposure among life-long non-smokers based on
14 studies," Dr. Johnson explained. "The premenopausal risk was up 119
percent for the five studies with more complete second-hand smoke
measures."
Compared with women with neither
active nor regular passive smoke exposure, those who smoked had a
46-percent increased risk of breast cancer. The risk was raised 108
percent in studies with more complete passive exposure assessment. For
studies with less complete passive exposure assessment, the risk was
increased by 15 percent.
Johnson noted that tobacco smoke
exposure was epidemic in many developed countries for at least the
last half century.
"In our Canadian breast-ETS study
included in the (analysis), we found that more than 50 percent of
women had reported smoking and another 40 percent had had regular
long-term exposure to passive smoking, either growing up with parents
who smoked, living with a spouse who smoked or working with smokers,"
he said.
"Luckily, the landscape is changing
rapidly regarding smoking in public places in North America in
particular, but there are still many children, spouses, and workers
being unnecessarily exposed to tobacco smoke daily," the investigator
stressed. "It is clearly time to redouble efforts to reduce
non-smokers' exposure to second-hand smoke in all environments," he
concluded. --
Reuters
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