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Weight Change May Also Change Breast Cancer Risk

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Weight Change May Also Change Breast Cancer Risk

URL of this page:

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_26056.html (*this

news item will not be available after 08/28/2005)

Friday, July 29, 2005

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women who gain a substantial amount of

weight at any age, but especially after 50, may have an increased

risk of breast cancer, new study findings suggest.

On the other hand, researchers found, young and middle-aged women

who lose weight may lower their risk of the disease.

The findings offer yet more incentive for women to avoid excessive

weight gain as they get older, the researchers report in the August

1st issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology.

Their study, of nearly 2,000 women with or without breast cancer,

found that weight changes over a lifetime appeared to influence a

woman's risk of the disease -- particularly the odds of developing

hormone-sensitive breast tumors, which rely on estrogen and

progesterone to fuel their growth.

This, according to the study authors, supports the theory that

excess body fat may raise the risk of breast cancer by elevating

estrogen levels.

Moreover, Dr. Sybil M. Eng and her colleagues conclude, the study

suggests " women can still modify their breast cancer risk later in

life by avoiding weight gain. "

Eng, who is currently with drugmaker Pfizer, Inc., was at Columbia

University in New York City at the time of the study.

She and her colleagues based their findings on data from a study of

Long Island women ages 20 to 98, about half of whom had been

diagnosed with breast cancer. All of the women were interviewed

about potential risk factors for breast cancer; as part of the

survey, they estimated their weight at age 20 and for each decade of

age after that.

The researchers found that women who gained a significant amount of

weight after the age of 20 were more likely to develop breast cancer

than women whose weight remained fairly stable. Those who gained

more than 33 pounds throughout adulthood had a 60 percent greater

risk than their peers who remained within 6 or 7 pounds of their age

20 weight.

The greatest risk seemed to come from weight gain after age 50,

according to Eng's team. Compared with women whose weight was stable

at this time, those who put on 25 pounds or more were 62 percent

more likely to develop breast cancer.

In contrast, women who lost more than a few pounds throughout

adulthood were about half as likely to develop breast cancer as

those whose weight stayed largely unchanged -- though weight loss

after 50 did not seem to lower a woman's risk of the disease.

Further analysis showed that the relationship between weight change

and breast cancer was true only of women who had never used hormone

replacement therapy (HRT), which itself may raise the risk of breast

cancer.

It's possible, according to Eng and her colleagues, that HRT " masks "

any effect of body fat on breast cancer risk, because hormone

therapy would likely raise estrogen levels more than excess body fat

would.

SOURCE: American Journal of Epidemiology, August 1, 2005.

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