Daily Trust

Study links air pollution from busy roads to breast cancer

- By Ojoma Akor & Amina Hussaini Kana

Anew study has suggested that working near busy roads could trigger breast cancer. The research, which was published in the journal New Solutions revealed that at least six women working at the same bridge got breast cancer within three years of one another.

The scientists said chemicals from air pollution in this area could be responsibl­e. The group of women all developed a cancer believed to have been caused by exhaust fumes in what researcher­s have branded a ‘new occupation­al disease’ reports Sam Blanchard of Mail Online.

The study said there is a one in 10,000 chance the cases were a coincidenc­e as the cancers were all so similar and close together. Also, another group of seven women developed the disease after working at a tunnel just four miles away at the border between the US and Canada.

The study focused on the case of one unnamed woman who worked for 20 years at the Ambassador Bridge between Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario.

The bridge connects the US with Canada and is the busiest commercial border crossing in North America, seeing 12,000 trucks and 15,000 cars every day.

Assuming the volume of traffic was the same over the woman’s 20-year employment and she worked 40 hour weeks, she could have been exposed to the fumes of up to 46.8 million vehicles.

According to the Mail Online report, Doctors Michael Gilbertson and Jim Brophy, from the University of Stirling in Scotland, believe chemicals in the traffic fumes caused the cancer.

They say the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, which try to stop tumours growing, can be shut down by vehicle exhaust fumes.

“These outbreaks of breast cancer represent a new occupation­al disease,” said Dr Gilbertson.

These women’s cases revealed working in the toll booths gave them a 16 times higher chance of breast cancer than the average woman.

The woman in the case study developed breast cancer when she was 44, and then again at the age of 51.

Her diagnosis came within 30 months of five other women working at the same border crossing.

And at the Detroit-Windsor tunnel, four miles away, another seven women were developing the same disease alongside them.

Dr Gilbertson added: ‘This new research indicates the role of trafficrel­ated air pollution in ... increasing (the) incidence of breast cancer in the general population.’

BRCA1 and BRCA2 are genes – the breast cancer genes – which play a big role in preventing breast cancer by repairing DNA to stop defects leading to uncontroll­ed tumours.

Around one in 400 women inherit a BRCA mutation which puts them at much higher risk of breast cancer.

Angelina Jolie (American actress, filmmaker and humanitari­an) did and had a double mastectomy.

However, the Stirling researcher­s say chemicals in traffic pollution can shut down the genes in the same way.

Dioxins, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns and aldehydes – all of which are found in exhaust fumes – are believed to stop the genes working.

Past research has confirmed this and the woman in the study did not have functionin­g BRCA genes but hadn’t inherited the defect.

And all the women’s cancers were early-onset (around half of cases are in women over 65), happened pre-menopause, and were recurring cancers.

“We now have plausible mechanisms for inferring how the BRCA1/2 tumour suppressor­s in this highly-exposed border guard became dysfunctio­nal and likely contribute­d to the ongoing epidemic of sporadic, early onset, premenopau­sal breast cancer among her colleagues,” said Dr Gilbertson

Shift work could make the pollutionc­ancer link worse, as past research on rats has shown those constantly exposed to daylight developed 60 per cent more tumours and the tumours grew 36 per cent faster.

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