Over the course of a lifetime,
one in eight women will be diagnosed with breast
cancer.
Risk factors you cannot change
include:
Age and gender
-- Your risk of developing breast cancer increases
as you get older. The majority of advanced breast
cancer cases are found in women over age 50.
Women are 100 times more likely to get breast
cancer then men.
Family history of breast
cancer -- You may also have a higher
risk for breast cancer if you have a close relative
has had breast, uterine, ovarian, or colon cancer.
About 20-30% of women with breast cancer have
a family history of the disease.
Genes -- Some
people have genes that make them more prone
to developing breast cancer. The most common
gene defects are found in the BRCA1 and BRCA2
genes. These genes normally produce proteins
that protect you from cancer. But if a parent
passes you a defective gene, you have an increased
risk for breast cancer. Women with one of these
defects have up to an 80% chance of getting
breast cancer sometime during their life.
Other genetic defects have been
linked to breast cancer, including those found
in the ATM gene, the CHEK-2 gene, and the p53
tumor suppressor gene, but these are very rare.
Menstrual cycle
-- Women who get their periods early (before
age 12) or went through menopause late (after
age 55) have an increased risk for breast cancer.
Other risk factors include:
Alcohol use
-- Drinking more than 1-2 glasses of alcohol
a day may increase your risk for breast cancer.
Childbirth
-- Women who have never had children or who
had them only after age 30 have an increased
risk for breast cancer. Being pregnant more
than once or becoming pregnant at an early age
reduces your risk of breast cancer.
DES -- Women
who took diethylstilbestrol (DES) to prevent
miscarriage may have an increased risk of breast
cancer after age 40. This drug was given to
the women in the 1940s-1960s.
Hormone replacement
therapy (HRT) -- You have a higher
risk for breast cancer if you have received
hormone replacement therapy for several years
or more. Many women take HRT to reduce the symptoms
of menopause.
Obesity --
Obesity has been linked to breast cancer, although
this link is controversial. The theory is that
obese women produce more estrogen, which can
fuel the development of breast cancer.
Radiation
-- If you received radiation therapy as a child
or young adult to treat cancer of the chest
area, you have a significantly higher risk for
developing breast cancer. The younger you started
such radiation, the higher your risk -- especially
if the radiation was given when a female was
developing breasts.
Breast implants, using antiperspirants,
and wearing underwire bras do not raise your
risk for breast cancer. There is no evidence
of a direct link between breast cancer and induced
abortion or pesticides.
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