WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 (Xinhua) -- Women with a family history of breast
cancer appear to have a lower risk of developing the disease before menopause if
they have ever breastfed a child, according to a report in the August 10/24
issue of Archives of Internal Medicine.
More women around the world develop breast cancer than any other
malignancy, background information in the article showed. Established risk
factors include a family history, beginning menstruation at an early age and not
having children or having a first child at a late age.
Alison M. Stuebe, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and
her colleagues used information from 60,075 women who had given birth and
participated in the Nurses' Health Study between 1997 and 2005.
Each woman completed a detailed questionnaire on demographic
characteristics, body measurements and lifestyle factors with follow-up
questionnaires every two years. Breastfeeding history was assessed in detail on
the 1997 questionnaire and on each subsequent follow-up the women were asked to
report whether they had been diagnosed with breast cancer.
Through the study which ended in June 2005, a total of 608 cases of
premenopausal breast cancer were diagnosed, at an average age of 46.2 years.
Women who had a first-degree relative with breast cancer had a lower risk of
developing the disease if they had ever breastfed than if they had never
breastfed. The association did not appear to change based on duration of
breastfeeding, whether breastfeeding was exclusive or whether the woman
experienced amenorrhea (absence of menstruation) as a result. There was no
association between breastfeeding and breast cancer among women without a family
history.
Women who did not breastfeed but used medication to suppress breast milk
production also appeared to have a lower risk of breast cancer than women who
neither breastfed nor used lactation suppression. This association could be
related to disordered involution, or a malfunction in the process by which
mammary tissue returns to its pre-pregnant state caused by engorgement and
inflammation, the authors said.
"Future studies of interactions among breastfeeding history, family history
and genotypes associated with breast cancer risk will be needed to confirm these
associations and explore underlying mechanisms," they write.
In the meantime, the observed risk reduction compared favorably to that
experienced by high-risk women taking hormonal treatments such as tamoxifen.
"Moreover, breastfeeding is associated with other multiple health benefits for
both mother and child. These data suggest that women with a family history of
breast cancer should be strongly encouraged to breastfeed."