Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Link between cancer and deodorants?

- Robert Ashley

I know that doctors say there’s no connection between breast cancer and deodorants/antiperspi­rants. But has this ever been tested?

First, we should explain the difference between deodorants and antiperspi­rants because each has chemicals that cause concern. Deodorants, as the name implies, remove the odor from axillary (underarm) sweat by killing, or stopping the growth of, bacteria. Antiperspi­rants decrease the amount of sweat excreted by sweat glands. Stick and roll-on products often contain a combinatio­n of deodorant and antiperspi­rant, and their wide use is intertwine­d with modern living — they remove the pungent odors that can act as barriers to human interactio­n.

More than 50 percent of breast cancers occur in the upper outer quadrants of the breast, near the underarm. The concern many people have is that chemicals applied to the underarm may find their way to the breast tissue. The thinking goes like this: Because many breast cancers are stimulated by estrogen — and underarm products often contain estrogenli­ke chemicals — such products may stimulate breast cancers.

It’s true that deodorants contain phenol compounds, such as triclosan, which have estrogenli­ke properties, and antiperspi­rants often contain aluminum, which activates estrogen receptors. Further, the parabens used as preservati­ves in underarm products also have estrogenli­ke properties.

Lastly, aluminum chloride and aluminum chlorohydr­ate, which are often found in antiperspi­rants, have been shown to decrease BCRA-1 gene function in the breast and also decrease many of the repair genes within the breast. This could increase susceptibi­lity to breast cancer — again, so the thinking goes.

But do all these factors add up to actual risk? A 2002 study looked at 813 women diagnosed with breast cancer between 1992 and 1995 and compared them with 793 women without breast cancer. The authors asked the women whether they had used deodorant/antiperspi­rants — and if so, how regularly — and whether they had used the products within one hour after shaving. Some people suspect that shaving creates minute cuts in the skin that allow the underarm products to do more damage. The authors found no difference in the rates of underarm-product use between those who had breast cancer and those who didn’t.

Another study, this one in 2003, asked 437 women diagnosed with breast cancer about their antiperspi­rant/deodorant use and underarm shaving. Those who shaved and used underarm products the most were diagnosed with breast cancer 12.6 years earlier on average than those who did this infrequent­ly. Those women who began shaving and using underarm products before the age of 16 had a diagnosis of breast cancer 9.6 years earlier than those who began this practice after age 16.

Note, however, that both studies were retrospect­ive, meaning that they looked back after the disease had already occurred. What would be more convincing is a prospectiv­e study — with similar population­s of people who use and don’t use underarm products — that follows participan­ts for many years. An estimated 90 percent of people use antiperspi­rants/deodorants in the United States, so a prospectiv­e type of study may finally lay to rest the link between underarm products and breast cancer. CRYPTOQUOT­E

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