|
Breast cancer risk higher in young
smokers
New York -
While there is never a good time to start smoking, new research
shows that women who light up before their first full-term pregnancy
may slightly increase their risk of breast cancer after menopause.
Those who start smoking after having
their first child, on the other hand, appear to be no more likely to
develop this cancer than those who never smoked.
"This study suggests that breast
cancer prevention needs to start in adolescence, when young women are
making decisions about whether to start smoking cigarettes," study
author Dr. Janet E. Olson, of the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in
Rochester, Minnesota, told Reuters Health. She noted that current
breast cancer prevention efforts mainly target adult women.
Research has consistently shown that
women who delay pregnancy until a late age have an increased risk of
developing breast cancer. The reason for this is thought to be related
to changes that occur in a woman's breast tissue during pregnancy.
"Breast tissue before the first
pregnancy is less developed and thought to be more vulnerable to the
effects of things that can cause cancer than breast tissue after a
woman has had her first child," Olson explained. "If a woman delays
pregnancy, then this 'vulnerable' tissue is around longer, and more
able to be damaged if she is exposed to carcinogens such as those that
are in cigarette smoke."
Previous studies have examined
whether cigarette smoking increases a woman's risk of postmenopausal
breast cancer, but the findings are conflicting. Some researchers
reported a five-fold increased risk of the condition, while others
found no increased risk.
Olson and her team investigated the
association by analyzing data on participants in the Iowa Women's
Health Study, which enrolled 55- to 69 year-old women in 1986 and
followed them through 1999.
Overall, 37,105 women were identified
as being at risk for cancer, including 7,095 who started smoking
before their first pregnancy and 4,186 who started smoking after their
first pregnancy. A total of 2,017 women developed breast cancer during
the study period.
Mothers who reported starting smoking
before their first pregnancy were 21 percent more likely to develop
breast cancer than mothers who never smoked, Olson and her colleagues
report in the journal, Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
These findings remained true even
when the authors took into account the women's age at first pregnancy
and the number of live births, the report indicates.
Breast cancer rates among mothers who
began smoking after their first pregnancy, however, were similar to
that observed among the never smokers, the researchers report.
"Our research does not mean it is
healthy to start smoking after a first pregnancy," Olson stressed.
"Smoking causes many health problems and should be avoided." --
Reuters
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|