Weight Loss
Decreases Risk of Breast Cancer in Susceptible Women
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Women with a mutation in the gene BRCA1, which predisposes women to breast cancer, are 65% less likely to develop the disease if they lose weight between 18 and 30 years of age.
Research published in the journal Breast Cancer Research suggests that young women with this genetic predisposition should avoid putting on weight in early adulthood, especially if they plan to have children.
Steven Narod from the University
of Toronto, Canada, and colleagues from universities
in
This is the largest study of this kind to date, with 1,073 women from five different countries in each group. By comparing the two groups, the researchers could identify the relationship between the incidence of breast cancer before the menopause in women at risk, and weight at 18, 30 and 40 years of age.
Their results show that, for women who have a mutation in
BRCA1, "weight loss of at least 10 pounds was associated with a 65%
reduction in cancer risk between ages 30 and 40." The study also shows
that BRCA1 mutation carriers who gained 10 pounds or more between 18 and 30
years of age are 44% more at risk of developing breast cancer if they have 2
children or more. No association between weight loss and breast cancer risk was
shown in BRCA2 mutation carriers.
SOURCE:
Breast Cancer Research,