LOS ANGELES, April 24 (Xinhua) -- A new study of more
than 100,000 women shows no definite connection between abortion, miscarriage
and breast cancer.
Breast cancer is neither linked with induced abortion
nor miscarriage in premenopausal women, according to the study conducted by a
research team from Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the
Harvard School of Public Health, Boston.
"In this cohort study of young women, we found no
association between induced abortion and breast cancer incidence and a
suggestion of an inverse association between spontaneous abortion (miscarriage)
and breast cancer incidence during 10 years of follow-up," said the study
published in the April 23 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.
The researchers examined data on almost 106,000 women
who took part in the Nurses' Health Study II, which began in 1993. The women
were ages 29 to 46 at the start of the study.
Among the women, more than 16,000 reported having had
an induced abortion at some point in their lives and almost 22,000 reported
having had a miscarriage. Between 1993 and 2003, there were 1,458 new cases of
breast cancer diagnosed among the women.
They found no link between abortion, miscarriage and
breast cancer generally. However, "we observed associations in two subgroups, an
association between induced abortion and progesterone receptor-negative breast
cancer (cancer that does not respond to the hormone progesterone) and an inverse
association between spontaneous abortion before the age of 20 years and breast
cancer incidence," the researchers said in the study.
Because these secondary analyses were based on small
numbers of women, "no obvious mechanisms can be provided for these subgroup
findings; thus, chance has to be considered as a possible explanation," they
wrote.