Sixty-four women a day are diagnosed with breast cancer in Canada. By modifying these factors, you can lower your risk of breast cancer.
This year in Canada, 23,400 women have been diagnosed with breast cancer. That averages about 64 women a day who receive the devastating news. Researchers have studied the possible causes of breast cancer, but a new report recently presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium helps to place environmental risks in perspective.
Researchers presented evidence to show that if you modify these factors, you can lower your risk of breast cancer.
Things to avoid
- smoking
- excess weight (especially if youāre postmenopausal)
- unnecessary medical tests, such as CT scans (due to exposure to ionizing radiation)
- combination (estrogen-progesterone) hormone replacement therapy
Possible risk factors
Researchers warn of a possible increased risk of breast cancer from these chemicals found in car exhaust, gasoline fumes, cigarette smoke, and in some workplace environments.
- benzene
- 1.3-butadiene
- ethylene oxide
The juryās still out on
- bisphenol A (BPA)
- pesticides
- cosmetics
- overnight shift work
Animal studies have shown that BPA could be a risk factor, but more research is needed to establish a link between it and breast cancer in humans.
LittleĀ impact
Thereās good evidence that these factors haveĀ little or no impact on breast cancer risk.
- hair dyes
- cellphones and electronics
Ways to minimize risk
- eat healthy, whole foods
- exercise regularly
- lower your alcohol intake
Other research avenues include understanding the way breast cancer develops over a womanās lifetime, the effect of combined risk exposures, and occupational risk factors.
Further research could also help quantify the degree of risk each factor carries with it.