Khaleej Times

Women on night shifts face higher cancer risk

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miami — Women who regularly work the night shift in Europe and North America may face a 19 per cent higher risk of cancer than those who work during the day, said a study on Monday.

These heightened risks were not apparent among female night-shift workers in Australia and Asia, said the meta-analysis in the journal Cancer Epidemiolo­gy, Biomarkers and Prevention.

“Our study indicates that night shift work serves as a risk factor for common cancers in women,” said study author Xuelei Ma, an oncologist at the West China Medical Center of Sichuan University in Chengdu, China.

“We were surprised to see the associatio­n between night shift work and breast cancer risk only among women in North America and Europe,” he added.

“It is possible that women in these locations have higher sex hormone levels, which have been positively associated with hormone-related cancers such as breast cancer.” The review incorporat­ed 61 previously published studies on the topic, spanning 3.9 million participan­ts from America, Europe, Australia, and Asia and more than 110,000 cancers.

One drawback to the study was that the different definition­s of long-term night shift work — with some of the papers describing it as “working during the night” and others saying “working at least three nights per month.” But the associatio­n was stark. While overall long-term night shift work increased the risk of cancer by 19 per cent, the risk of certain cancers were even higher.

Female night shift workers saw a 41 per cent increased risk of skin cancer and a 32 per cent higher risk of breast cancer. The risk of gastrointe­stinal cancer was 18 per cent higher than in women who did not perform long-term night shift work. A subset of nurses was also highlighte­d in the study, which showed “those who worked the night shift had an increased risk of breast (58%), gastrointe­stinal (35%), and lung cancer (28%) compared with those that did not work night shifts.”—

 ?? AFP file ?? Female night shift workers saw a 41 per cent increased risk of skin cancer. —
AFP file Female night shift workers saw a 41 per cent increased risk of skin cancer. —

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