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Left-handed women's risk of breast
cancer higher
New York -
Left-handed women are more than twice as likely as
right-handers to suffer from breast cancer before reaching menopause,
Dutch scientists said on Monday.
More than a million women are
diagnosed with breast cancer worldwide each year. Three-quarters of
cases occur after menopause, which usually begins around the age of
50.
Researchers at the University Medical
Center in Utrecht in the Netherlands speculate that there is a shared
origin early in life for both left handedness and developing breast
cancer, possibly exposure to hormones in the womb.
"Left handedness is associated with
breast cancer, most specifically pre-menopausal breast cancer," said
Cuno Uiterwaal, an assistant professor of clinical epidemiology at the
university, in an interview.
He and his colleagues studied 12,000
healthy, middle-aged women born between 1932-1941 who were part of a
breast screening program. The scientists determined their hand
preference and followed up their medical history to see which women
developed breast cancer.
"If we take pre-menopausal and
post-menopausal breast cancer then there was a 40 percent increased
risk," Uiterwaal said of left-handed women.
But when they spilled it further the
scientists found most of the excess risk was in breast cancer before
the menopause.
"We found that left-handed women are
more than twice as likely to develop pre-menopausal breast cancer as
non-left handed women," the researchers said in the report published
online by the British Medical Journal.
Other risk factors such as family
history of breast cancer, numbers of pregnancies, smoking habits, and
social and economic status were considered.
About 8 percent to 9 percent of women
are left-handed. But the scientists said the findings should not alarm
them.
"What our study intends to do is
focus on this area. We do not know all the causes of breast cancer,
that is why we should continue. This may be one new factor that leads
us to a better understanding of the aetiology (cause of the illness),"
Uiterwaal added.
About 5 percent to 10 percent of
breast cancers are hereditary. Most are due to mutations in the BRCA1
or BRCA2 genes. The earlier the illness is diagnosed and treated, the
better the prognosis is for the woman.
"Although the underlying mechanisms
remain elusive, our results support the hypothesis that left
handedness is related to increased risk of breast cancer," the
researchers added. --
Reuters
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