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Mammogram via Shutterstock

Surprises in hunt for environmental links to breast cancer

A new study of 1,200 school girls has given clues about the possible origins of the disease.

A DECADE-LONG research effort to uncover the environmental causes of breast cancer by studying both lab animals and a group of healthy US girls has turned up some surprises, scientists say.

At the centre of the investigation are 1,200 school girls who do not have breast cancer, but who have already given scientists important new clues about the possible origins of the disease.

Some risk factors are well understood, including early puberty, later age of childbearing, late onset of menopause, estrogen replacement therapy, drinking alcohol and exposure to radiation.

Advances have also been made in identifying risky gene mutations, but these cases make up a small minority.

Family history

“Most of breast cancer, particularly in younger women, does not come from family histories,” said Leslie Reinlib, a program director at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

“We have still got 80 percent that has got to be environmental,” said Reinlib, who is part of the Breast Cancer and the Environment Research Program (BCERP) program.

Some of its researchers track what is happening in the human population, while others study how carcinogens, pollutants and diet affect the development of the mammary glands and breast tumors in lab mice.

The program’s primary focus is on puberty because its early onset “is probably one of the best predictors of breast cancer in women,” Reinlib said.

The 1,200 US girls enrolled in the study at sites in New York City, northern California and the greater Cincinnati, Ohio, area beginning in 2004, when they were between the ages of six and eight.

The aim was to measure the girls’ chemical exposures through blood and urine tests, and to learn how environmental exposures affected the onset of puberty and perhaps breast cancer risk later in life.

Researchers quickly discovered that their effort to reach girls before puberty had not been entirely successful.

“By age eight, 40 percent were already in puberty,” said Reinlib. “That was a surprising bit of information.”

Further research has shown that the girls appear to be entering puberty six to eight months earlier than their peers did in the 1990s.

A study published last week in the journal Pediatrics on this cohort of girls found that obesity was acting as a primary driver of earlier breast development.

Exposure to chemicals

Initial results showed “for the first time that phthalates, BPA, pesticides are in all the girls they looked at,” said Reinlib.

Researchers were taken aback by the pervasiveness of the exposures, but also by the data which appeared to show some plastic chemicals might not be as influential on breast development as some have feared.

They didn’t find much of an association between puberty and phthalates, which are these chemicals that leach out of plastic bottles and Tupperware.

Another major finding regarded blood chemicals from two nearby groups in Ohio and Kentucky, both drinking water that was apparently contaminated by industrial waste.

Girls in northern Kentucky had blood levels of an industrial chemical – perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA or C-8) found in Teflon non-stick coating for pans – three times as high as those who drank water from the Ohio River near Cincinnati, where water was filtered with state-of-the-art technology.

“Northern Kentucky did not have granular activated carbon filtration” in their water supply said researcher Susan Pinney, a professor at the University of Cincinnati School of Medicine.

“In 2012 they put it in after they learned of our preliminary results.” Families were also notified of their daughters’ blood levels, she said.

The chemicals can linger in the body for years. Researchers were dismayed to learn that the longer the girls spent breastfeeding as infants – typically touted for its health benefits – the higher their PFOA levels compared to girls who were fed formula.

Animal studies

What cannot be studied in the girls is tried on lab mice, who in one experiment are being fed high-fat diets and exposed to a potent carcinogen to see how the two interact.

Mammary tumors develop much faster in the high-fat diet group, said scientist Richard Schwartz of the department of microbiology and molecular genetics at Michigan State University.

Fat mice have more blood supply in the mammary glands, higher inflammation levels and display changes in the immune system.

Follow-up studies suggest that cancer risk stays high even if mice are fed high-fat diets in puberty and switched to low-fat diets in adulthood, he told AFP.

The damage is already done. Does this mean that humans are at risk the same way? We don’t know that with certainty.

But the findings do reinforce the advice that people often hear regarding how to maintain good health – avoid fatty foods, maintain a normal weight and reduce chemical exposures wherever possible, experts say.

- © AFP, 2013

Read: Cancer-causing radon found in over 430 Irish homes>

Read: Obesity linked to early onset of puberty in girls>

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    Mute Fionnuala Sarsfield
    Favourite Fionnuala Sarsfield
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:44 PM

    I had breast cancer. I never used spray deodorants or was on the pill. Sometimes, life is just sh* t*. Often there is no cause and effect. However, I am well again now, thank science.

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    Mute Linda Economides
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    Nov 11th 2013, 6:34 PM

    Types of Breast Cancer, Symptoms and Treatment. http://tiny.cc/zude6w

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    Mute Christine Blair
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    Nov 11th 2013, 6:44 PM

    Study gives hope to treat breast cancer. http://kwn.me/ktf8

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    Mute Shanti Om
    Favourite Shanti Om
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:03 PM

    And please – never forget. Men can get breast cancer too.

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    Mute sean o reilly
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:37 PM

    What about the use of the pill. Messing with the hormones in the body for years. Would that be a risk factor in oestrogen positive tumours?

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    Mute Dermot Ryan
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:32 PM

    My sister in law died from breast cancer …before she died she had a mamosectomy and the lymph nodes under her arms were also removed ;
    Where is the strongest concentration of chemicals on the female body ? spraying deodorant under their arms ?
    I don’t know I am not a doctor !

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    Mute Shanti Om
    Favourite Shanti Om
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:02 PM

    And the majority of anti perspirants contain aluminium Chlorohydrate.
    Bearing in mind aluminium is linked with Alzheimer’s it’s a good reason to campaign for this ingredient to be replaced.. It doesn’t need to be there, and is absent from certain products..
    Can’t find a women’s one, but old spice and some of the Gillette ones are without it.

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    Mute Conor Heffernan
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:28 PM

    If that was the case there would be the same amount of men dying from breast cancer as women.

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    Mute Shanti Om
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:59 PM
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    Mute Ken Mitchell
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    Nov 11th 2013, 5:04 PM

    Aluminum and aluminum chlotohydrate are two different chemicals and may have completely different properties, oxygen is explosive but H2O ( water) isn’t for example.

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    Mute Paul Lawlor
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    Nov 13th 2013, 2:50 PM

    I know of two Males who have had it.

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    Mute Dermot Lane
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:46 PM

    Meat in America is way more toxic and hormones etc are permitted that are banned in Europe. I think I remember a link made several years ago between growth hormones in food and early puberty, and early puberty according to the article above is a risk factor. I would certainly say there is an environmental or dietary link with breast cancer as it is much rarer in Asian societies. It’s becoming less rate as they adopt the western lifestyle

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    Mute Dermot Lane
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:46 PM

    Less rare

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    Mute Rkmr
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    Nov 11th 2013, 4:07 PM

    Link to this research paper?

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    Mute Joe hynes
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    Nov 11th 2013, 6:03 PM

    Likely not caused by any one thing but a mixture of inputs – different levels of genetic susceptibility, different environmental conditions and individual lifestyle habits. Varied inputs = variable outcomes for every individual.

    Live as close to how your pre-industrial revolution ancestors did (diet, exercise, sleeping patterns etc) but combined with the benefits of modern housing and medicine and you give yourself the best chance of avoiding negative outcomes and reinforcing positive outcomes

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    Mute Ricky Spanish
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:51 PM

    Picture caption should read:
    “Get your hand off me”.

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    Mute John Buckley
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    Nov 12th 2013, 2:46 AM

    Yes!! by all means avoid fatty foods. Especially those pesky natural saturated fats that are essential for life! Stick to the processed low fat foods and if that doesn’t work you can take a rake of pills to make you feel full when your body craves nutrition, or drop a few statins to get that nasty cholesterol down to whatever the experts deem is the new healthy level for this week!

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    Mute Chris Turner
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    Nov 12th 2013, 3:22 AM

    Environmental toxicants are a well known cause of breast cancer. The main cause are medical x-rays which is also soundly validated but overlooked and downplayed by the medical industry (see Rolf Hefti’s ebook “The Mammogram Myth”), for obvious reasons. As a result the medical profession and the misguided pink ribbon groups keep misleading women about the truth on breast cancer.

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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Nov 12th 2013, 12:09 AM

    So much of this is scary. I believe that plastics and pesticides will ultimately be proven to be the key factors in the increased prevalence of many other forms of cancer, along with chemical preservative, colorants and flavour enhances/ replicators in processed foods…

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    Mute David McShite
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:17 PM

    The

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    Mute Hugh Chaloner
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    Nov 11th 2013, 3:21 PM

    end is nigh?

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