The Sunday Guardian

Fatty diet in pregnancy may up breast cancer risk

- CORRESPOND­ENT

High-fat diet in pregnancy may increase the risk of breast cancer over generation­s, a new study has revealed.

Feeding pregnant female mice a diet high in fat derived from common corn oil resulted in genetic changes that substantia­lly increased the susceptibi­lity of breast cancer in three generation­s of female offspring, according to the study published online in the journal Breast Cancer Research on Monday.

“It is believed that environmen­tal and lifestyle factors, such as diet, plays a critical role in increasing human breast cancer risk, and so we use animal models to reveal the biological mechanisms responsibl­e for the increase in risk in women and their female progeny,” senior author Leena Hilakivi-Clarke, professor of oncology at the Georgetown University, said.

The new study revealed a number of genetic changes in the first and third female generation­s of mice that were fed high- fat diets during pregnancy, including several genes linked in women to increased breast cancer risk, increased resistance to cancer treatment, poor cancer prognosis and impaired anti-cancer immunity.

In the new study, the amount of fat fed to the experiment­al mice matched what a human might eat daily.

But both the experiment­al mice and the control mice ate the same amount of calories and they weighed the same.

The experiment­al mice got 40% of their energy from fat, and the control mice got a normal diet that provided 18% of their energy from fat. The typical human diet now consists of 33% fat, according to the study. IANS

 ??  ?? External factors play a critical role in increasing human breast cancer risk.
External factors play a critical role in increasing human breast cancer risk.

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