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3 drinks a day raises breast
cancer risk
December 21, 2007
BARCELONA, Spain - All types of alcohol — wine, beer or
liquor — add equally to the risk of developing breast cancer in
women, American researchers said Thursday.
"This is a hugely underestimated risk factor," said Dr. Patrick
Maisonneuve, head of epidemiology at the European Institute of
Oncology in Italy, who was not connected to the study.
"Women drinking wine because they think it is healthier than
beer are wrong," he said. "It's about the amount of alcohol
consumed, not the type."
Previous studies have shown a link between alcohol consumption
and breast cancer, but there have been conflicting messages
about whether different kinds of alcohol were more dangerous
than others.
The researchers, led by Dr. Arthur Klatsky of the Kaiser
Permanente Medical Care Program in Oakland, Calif., revealed
their findings at a meeting of the European Cancer Organization
in Barcelona.
Researchers analyzed the drinking habits of 70,033 women of
various races and asked them questions during health exams
between 1978 and 1985. By 2004, 2,829 of these women had been
diagnosed with breast cancer.
Klatsky and his colleagues looked at which types of alcohol the
women drank, as well as their total alcohol intake. They
compared that to women who had less than one drink a day.
Researchers found no difference in the risk of developing breast
cancer among women who drank wine, beer, or liquor. Compared
with light drinkers — those who had less than one drink a day —
women who had one or two drinks a day increased their risk of
developing breast cancer by 10 percent. Women who had more than
three drinks a day raised their risk by 30 percent.
"A 30 percent increased risk is not trivial," Klatsky said. "It
provides more evidence for why heavy drinkers should quit or cut
down."
Other factors count
Some experts said that people might be confused by suggestions
that drinking red wine is healthy, since some studies have
suggested that it protects against heart disease.
"None of these mechanisms have anything to do with breast
cancer," Klatsky said. Though it is not entirely clear how
alcohol contributes to breast cancer, some experts think it
raises hormone levels in the blood to levels that could
potentially cause cancer.
Still, doctors said that other factors, such as genetics,
obesity, and age, were more important in raising the breast
cancer risk than was alcohol consumption.
More public education may be needed. "Alcohol has had a lot of
good publicity. People may not realize the risk they're taking
when they have a few drinks," said Tim Key, of the Cancer
Research UK Epidemiology Unit at Oxford. Key was not involved in
the study.
According to data published in the British Journal of Cancer in
2002, 4 percent of all breast cancers — about 44,000 cases a
year — in the United Kingdom are due to alcohol consumption.
Only a small proportion of women are thought to be heavy
drinkers. But experts now say there is enough evidence to blame
alcohol for breast cancer — and to start educating the public.
"Any alcohol consumption will raise your breast cancer risk,"
Key said. "Women don't have to abstain from alcohol entirely,
but they need to be aware of the risks they're taking when they
have a few too many drinks."
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