Westernization Linked to Breast Cancer Rise
Tuesday, January 11, 2005
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The breast cancer rate is
rising among women in Singapore and appears to be approaching that seen in
Europe, researchers report. The introduction of a Westernized lifestyle and
child-bearing pattern may underlie this trend, they suggest.
Lead investigator Dr. Kee-Seng Chia told Reuters Health that the breast
cancer incidence in Singapore will continue to increase over the next decades.
"In the year 2015, one out of every 10 women is likely to develop breast cancer
in her lifetime."
Chia, at the National University of Singapore, and colleagues came to this
conclusion after comparing data for more than 10,000 breast cancer cases
reported in Singapore from 1968 to 1997 with more than 135,000 Swedish cases in
the same period.
The incidence rate of breast cancer increased in Sweden from 54 to 77 per
100,000 women. However, in Singapore the rate increased 20 to 44 per 100,000,
the researchers report in the International Journal of Cancer.
They note that the incidence rate was increasing almost three times faster
among the youngest age group of women in Singapore than in the corresponding
group in Sweden.
In addition, continued Chia, an "increasing number of post-menopausal women
will also be coming down with breast cancer as our pattern shifts from the
pre-menopausal to post-menopausal age group."
"It is too late for these women to avoid the risk factors," Chia said.
However, "Increased self-awareness and early diagnosis can catch the cancer at
an early stage and improve prognosis."
SOURCE: International Journal of Cancer, January 1, 2005.