New Straits Times

Another reason to watch your weight

Managing obesity and alcohol consumptio­n could prevent nearly 30,000 breast cancer cases in the next decade

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NEW Australian research has found that maintainin­g a healthy weight and a low alcohol intake of less than one drink per day could help prevent thousands of breast cancer cases within the next 10 years. Led by researcher­s at the University of New South Wales, the new study looked at six Australian cohort studies which included a total of 214,536 women to investigat­e if changing certain lifestyle habits could possibly prevent future cases of pre-menopausal and post-menopausal breast cancer.

The findings, published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Cancer, showed that for pre-menopausal women, regular alcohol consumptio­n explains 12.6 per cent of breast cancer cases in the next decade, and using oral contracept­ives for five years or more accounts for 7.1 per cent. These factors combined account for 18.8 per cent of future breast cancer cases.

For post-menopausal women, being overweight or obese explains 12.8 per cent of breast cancer cases in the next 10 years, regular alcohol consumptio­n 6.6 per cent, and current use of menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) 6.9 per cent. Combined, the three factors account for 24.2 per cent of future cases.

“We found that current levels of overweight and obesity (defined as a body mass index of 25 or higher) are responsibl­e for the largest proportion of preventabl­e future breast cancers — more specifical­ly, 17,500 or 13 per cent of breast cancers in the next decade,” says study author Dr Maarit Laaksonen.

“Regular alcohol consumptio­n is the second largest contributo­r — 13 per cent of pre-menopausal and six per cent of post-menopausal breast cancers — that

is 11,600 cases over the next 10 years, are attributab­le to consuming alcohol regularly.”

ALCOHOL AND BREAST CANCER

The researcher­s also point out that this is the first study to show that regular alcohol consumptio­n is a leading modifiable cause of breast cancer for pre-menopausal women.

Although the current Australian recommenda­tion is to drink no more than two alcoholic drinks per day on average, the study found that risk of breast cancer increased with an average consumptio­n of just one alcoholic drink per day.

Dr Laaksonen said : “Our findings support the current Australian and internatio­nal recommenda­tions of using MHT for the shortest duration possible, and only to alleviate menopausal symptoms, not for the prevention of chronic disease.”

She added that women should not interpret the results as meaning they should stop taking the contracept­ive pill. “When it comes to oral contracept­ion, it is not recommende­d that women restrict their use of OCs. The latest position statement from Cancer Council says that over the course of a woman’s lifetime, the net effect of OCs is actually cancer-protective, as they provide long-term protection against endometria­l and ovarian cancers, meaning that the potential benefits, including reproducti­ve benefits, outweigh the harms.”

 ??  ?? Maintainin­g a healthy weight could prevent thousands of future breast cancer cases, according to new research.
Maintainin­g a healthy weight could prevent thousands of future breast cancer cases, according to new research.

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