My Health Mart is an online, healthcare website. It provides easy-to-read, in-depth, authoritative medical information for users via its robust, user-friendlyweb site. Since 2006, YaCool.Org.Ru has provided the latest news and information about Health News, Diet & Nutrition, Sexual Health, women's Health, Men's Health, Children's Health, Cancer Center, Disease.
Position: Home>Cancer>
Dense breast tissue hikes risk of cancer - Cancer - MSNBC.com
Source: MSNBC NEWS Author: MSNBC NEWS Published date: 2007-01-19  

Dense breast tissue hikes risk of cancer

Strong predictor 'ignored to an absolutely unbelievable degree'
Image: Mammogram
Getty Images Stock
Cancers are more frequent - not just hidden - in women with dense breasts, a new study finds.

Cancer turns up five times more often in women with extremely dense breasts than in those with the most fatty tissue, a study shows, signaling the importance of a risk factor rarely discussed with patients.

On mammograms, fat looks dark, but dense tissue is light, like tumors, so it can hide the cancers. But this study confirms that cancers are also more frequent - not just hidden - in women with dense breasts.

That means that density is a true risk factor, along with other strong predictors like age and the genes BRCA1 and 2. Yet specialists say that breast density is rarely considered with other risk factors in discussions between doctors and patients.

"It's been ignored to an absolutely unbelievable degree," said study leader Dr. Norman Boyd at Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto.

The Canadian study by cancer centers in Toronto and Vancouver focuses on how and when cancers were found over eight years in existing records of 1,112 women collected between 1981 and last year. It is being reported in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

Breast density comes from the presence of more connective, duct-lining and milk-gland tissue than fat. But a woman can't judge her own density; it is routinely evaluated from a mammogram.

Previous studies had linked breast density to a higher rate of cancer, pointing to both masking and a separate biological risk.

Cancers may be masked during mammograms
In this study, women with at least 75 percent dense breasts showed five times more likelihood of cancer than women with less than 10 percent density.

The researchers went further by calculating just how many more cancers were found at screening, within the next year, and in the years afterward. Cancers found within a year were considered likely to be present, but masked, during the earlier mammogram. But a true biological risk was seen in cancers discovered by mammogram or long afterward.

In this study, cancers were 18 times more likely in women with the densest breasts within the first year after mammograms - the masking effect.

 Click for related content

However, cancers in women with the densest breasts were also more than three times more likely to turn up at the time of screening and after the first year following a mammogram. That confirms and helps quantify the true biological link between density and cancer.

"I think the masking thing is important, and it does happen, but the most important thing is that this is an incredible risk factor," said Dr. Karla Kerlikowske, of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in San Francisco, who wrote an accompanying editorial. "This probably counts for a large percentage of the cancer that's occurring."

Breast cancers are the second most lethal kind after lung cancers in women. About one in eight women will get invasive breast cancer during her lifetime, according to the American Cancer Society. Last year, roughly 41,000 U.S. women died of it. Worldwide, it kills about 370,000 women each year.

In this study, density of more than 50 percent accounted for 16 percent of all cancers and a quarter in women under age 56.

Rethinking cancer screening
Robert Smith, a screening expert at the American Cancer Society, said this study and its predecessors will encourage a rethinking of cancer screening.

Test yourself
?/font>Breast cancer

How much do you know?

For now, women can ask their doctor about their breast density based on a mammogram and how it might affect their risk. However, experts say it's too soon for doctors to provide solid advice to individual patients.

For one thing, quicker, more accurate tools are needed to measure density. Some experts believe that ultrasound, magnetic resonance imaging or computerized mammograms may ultimately prove better at finding tumors in very dense breasts, but it's still unclear how much value each might yield for its cost.

"In a perfect world, I would have my wife do an ultrasound, MRI, and a digital mammogram," said Dr. Gary J. Whitman, a radiologist at University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. He was not involved in the study.

Some believe lifestyle changes or even preventive drugs may one day be recommended to women with this risk factor.

Meanwhile, specialists hope to identify genes that promote density, because they might act as targets for cancer drugs.

In another study in the same journal, a research team at the University of Michigan described a newly identified set of 186 genes that appears to predict whether a breast tumor will spread.

Other so-called gene signatures have been discovered for breast cancer, but this one is also linked to survival in lung, prostate and brain cancers.

?2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

[back to top] [Print This Article] [Close]  
Top Stories
WEDNESDAY, Aug. 2 (HealthDay News) -- Chemicals found in onions and curry may help prev
THURSDAY, July 20 (HealthDay News) -- Simply asking patients to map their moles on a dr
MONDAY, July 24 (HealthDay News) -- Anthelios SX, an over-the-counter sunscreen that co
TUESDAY, July 25 (HealthDay News) -- A new sunscreen just approved by the U.S. Food and
Around 60,000 people worldwide die each year from skin cancer caused by too much sun e
FRIDAY, Aug. 18 (HealthDay News) -- Sunscreens have long been an ally in the battle aga
Related
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 20 (HealthDay News) -- Aggressive cancer cells have a "toggle swi
Summary: Women whose partners use condoms every time they have sex are less likely to
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 20 (HealthDay News) -- In the not-too-distant future, you may be able
THURSDAY, Aug. 31 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. scientists are pointing to the full, 18-mont
Researchers from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) say they have found a way to turn
FRIDAY, Aug. 18 (HealthDay News) -- Sunscreens have long been an ally in the battle aga
Around 60,000 people worldwide die each year from skin cancer caused by too much sun e
TUESDAY, July 25 (HealthDay News) -- A new sunscreen just approved by the U.S. Food and
 
Home | News | Diet & Nutrition | Sexual Health | Women's Health | Men's Health | Children's Health | Cancer | Disease
Note: This site does not provide medical or any other health care or fitness advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The site and its services, including the information above, are for informational purposes only and are not a substitute for professional medical or health advice, examination, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health professional before starting any new treatment, making any changes to existing treatment, or altering in any way your current exercise or diet regimen. Do not delay seeking or disregard medical advice based on information on this site. Medical information changes rapidly and while MyHealth-Mart and its content providers make efforts to update the content on the site, some information may be out of date. No health information on MyHealth-Mart, including information about herbal therapies and other dietary supplements, is regulated or evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and therefore the information should not be used to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease without the supervision of a medical doctor.
© copyright reserved by YaCool.Org.Ru 2007-2008