|
E-mail this page to a friend!
Senior Health & Medicine
Obesity Linked to All Types of Breast Cancer in
Older Women
Risk for spread of disease increased for all women
who gained weight
May 22, 2006 - According to a new study, women who
gain weight in adulthood face a higher lifetime risk of all types of
breast cancer even if they do not take hormone replacement therapy after
menopause. The study of postmenopausal women is the first to investigate
the relationship between weight gain and type of breast cancer.
| |
Related Stories |
|
| |
Americans Don't Connect Obesity to Cancer
May 16, 2006 -
Read
more...
Breast Cancer Risk Assessment Information Updated by
Cancer Institute
Risk
Assessment Tool available online
May 8, 2006 –
Read
more...
Women Have High Expectations of Mammography
Screening
May 4, 2006 –
Read
more...
Older Women Breast Cancer Survivors Not Continuing
Mammograms
April 24, 2006 - Read
more...
Success of Raloxifene to Prevent Breast Cancer is
Encouraging for Senior Women
Osteoporosis drug
Raloxifene as effective as Tamoxifen without side effects
April 19, 2006 –
Read more...
Postmenopausal Women See No Increased Risk of Breast
Cancer with Estrogen-Alone
April 11, 2006 -
Read more...
Estrogen May Increase Blood Clots in Postmenopausal
Women, Breast Cancer in Blacks
April 11, 2006 -
Read more...
Cancer Deaths to Continue Decline in 2006
Annual report from American Cancer Society
Feb. 9, 2006 -
Read
more... with graphs...
Low-Fat Diet with Fruit, Veggies, Grains Does NOT
Reduce Heart, Breast Cancer or Colon Cancer Risks
Feb. 6, 2006 –
Read more...
Surgery Best for Controlling Breast Cancer in
Elderly Women
Jan. 30, 2006 - Read more...
Read more
on
Health & Medicine |
|
Published in the July 1, 2006 issue of CANCER, a
peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the study reveals
that the greater the weight gain as an adult, the greater the risk for
all histological types, tumor stages, and grades of breast cancer,
particularly advanced malignancies. The most extremely obese women were
up to three times more likely to have regional or distant metastases
than women with less weight gain.
Breast cancer risk is linked to increased lifetime
levels of circulating estrogen. Fat tissue increases circulating
estrogen, thereby adding to the risk. Previous studies have shown,
though, that the risk can be affected by other factors. Postmenopausal
women who take hormone replacement therapy actually mitigate the effects
of obesity on cancer risk. Moreover, current weight as defined by body
mass index is not as important as a woman's weight gain from the age of
18.
While there is much literature on the risk of
obesity and breast cancer, there is no data on whether that risk is
specific for the type of breast cancer.
Led by Heather Spencer Feigelson, Ph.D., M.P.H of
the American Cancer Society, researchers investigated the risk between
weight gain and type of invasive breast cancer among 44,161
postmenopausal women who were not taking hormone therapy.
The researchers found that the greater the weight
gain, the greater the risk for all types, stages, and grades of breast
cancer. Compared to women who gained 20 pounds or less during adulthood,
women who gained over 60 pounds were almost twice as likely to have
ductal type tumors and more than 1.5 times more likely to have lobular
type cancers.
The risk for metastatic disease increased for all
women who gained weight, with the risk greater than three-fold for women
who gained over 60 pounds. As expected, weight gain increased the risk
of estrogen receptor positive tumors, but not of tumors that did not
present estrogen receptors.
Dr. Feigelson and her colleagues conclude that
"these data further illustrate the relationship between adult weight
gain and breast cancer, and the importance of maintaining a healthy body
weight through-out adulthood."
More about study:
Article: "Adult Weight Gain and Histopathologic
Characteristics of Breast Cancer among Postmenopausal Women," Heather
Spencer Feigelson, Alpa V. Patel, Lauren R. Teras, Ted Gansler, Michael
J. Thun, Eugenia E. Calle, CANCER; Published Online: May 22, 2006 (DOI:
10.1002/cncr.21965); Print Issue Date: July 1, 2006.
Click to More Senior News on the
Front Page
Copyright: SeniorJournal.com |