Newswise, May 2, 2017– Alcohol
consumption is known to be a risk factor for breast cancer based on studies
predominantly done in white women. Now a University of North Carolina Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center study has found the same risk exists for black
women, an understudied group.
Researchers found in the new study
that black women who drank more than 14 alcoholic drinks per week had a
significantly higher risk of invasive breast cancer than those who drank less.
The findings, published in the
journal Cancer, Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, confirmed the link
between alcohol consumption and breast cancer risk, which has been seen in
other studies drawn from majority white populations.
And while some breast cancer risk
factors - like age or genetics -- aren’t easily modified, alcohol consumption
is one risk factor that women, regardless of race, can change to potentially
lower their cancer risk.
“Minority groups are often
understudied because they represent a smaller proportion of study populations.
This work avoided that limitation by working with a consortium of many
different studies, including more than 20,000 black women,” said Melissa
Troester, PhD, a member of UNC Lineberger and professor of epidemiology in the
UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health.
“We found that the patterns observed
in other studies examining alcohol and breast cancer risk hold in black women,
too.”
The researchers analyzed data for
22,338 women from the African American Breast Cancer Epidemiology and Risk
(AMBER) consortium, which combines data from four large breast cancer studies.
Researchers evaluated alcohol as a
risk factor for invasive breast cancer as well as for specific breast cancer
subtypes, such as estrogen receptor positive or negative cancer.
“Our study demonstrated there is
benefit in creating consortia to focus on understudied groups,” said the
study’s first author Lindsay Williams, a graduate research assistant at UNC
Gillings.
When they studied the data across
all breast cancer subtypes, they found consuming seven or more alcoholic drinks
per week was linked to increased risk of breast cancer across all subtypes.
Women who previously drank alcohol,
and later stopped, had lower risk than women who reported recent use –
indicating that women may be able to reduce their risk by drinking less.
However, they did find significantly
higher risk for some women who have never drank alcohol.
The researchers said that the group
of women that avoids alcohol also sometimes includes women who have other
health conditions, and some of these health conditions can increase risk for
breast cancer. The finding may direct additional research.
“In the future, it may be
worth-while to better characterize women who identify as never drinkers to
understand reasons for abstaining from alcohol,” Williams said.
The researchers underscored that the
study is important as alcohol consumption can be changed or addressed.
“Overall, our findings among African
American women mirror those reported in the literature for white women, namely
that high levels of alcohol intake – more than one drink per day – are
associated with increased breast cancer risk,” Troester said.
“Alcohol is an important modifiable
exposure, and women who are concerned about their risk of breast cancer could
consider reducing levels of exposure.”
In addition to Troester
and Williams, other authors include: Andrew F. Olshan, Chi-Chen Hong, Elisa V.
Bandera, Lynn Rosenberg, Ting-Yuan David Cheng, Kathryn L. Lunetta, Susan E.
McCann, Charles Poole, Laurence N. Kolonel, Julie R. Palmer, and Christine B.
Ambrosone.
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