Drinking Boosts Breast Cancer Risk for Black Women, Too

Researcher suggests women think about lowering their alcohol intake if they're drinkers
woman reading newspaper
woman reading newspaper

MONDAY, May 1, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Tipping back seven or more alcoholic drinks a week appears to raise a black woman's risk of breast cancer, new research says.

Previous studies linking alcohol intake with a higher risk for breast cancer involved primarily white women, the study's authors explained. The current study, published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, found that black women don't seem to escape this risk.

"Alcohol is an important modifiable exposure, whereas many other risk factors are not," said study author Melissa Troester in a journal news release. She's director of the Center for Environmental Health and Susceptibility at the University of North Carolina's Gillings School of Global Public Health.

Troester said that women who are concerned about their risk of breast cancer might want to consider drinking less if they're currently drinking more than seven drinks a week.

For the new study, the researchers reviewed questionnaires completed by more than 22,000 black women on their alcohol intake.

Overall, black women drink less alcohol than white women, the researchers said. But black women who had at least seven drinks each week were at greater risk for nearly all subtypes of breast cancer.

The women who consumed 14 or more alcoholic drinks on a weekly basis were 33 percent more likely to develop breast cancer than women who had four or fewer drinks a week, the study found.

But the study didn't prove a cause-and-effect connection between breast cancer and alcohol, only a link.

There are other important risk factors for breast cancer. Troester said these include weight, reproductive history, birth control use and family history. Additional studies are needed to determine how each of these breast cancer risk factors affects each race, she said.

"Understanding the impact of these various risk factors could help narrow the disparity in breast cancer incidence and mortality," Troester said.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on breast cancer risk factors.

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