Two independent reports published this week
describe minor association between the number of moles women have and their
risk of developing breast cancer, but the details of what link moles have to
these risks are not known.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
The
open-access journal PLoS Medicine reported on Tuesday that two
prospective cohort studies–large population-based studies that follow subjects
over time and monitor for disease development–found that the risk of developing
breast cancer increased slightly with increases in number of moles on the skin
of women.
In one of the studies,
researchers at Harvard and Indiana Universities followed over 74,500 female
nurses from 1986 through 2010 in a large, nation-wide cohort study called The
Nurses’ Health Study. The ages of the women at the beginning of the study
ranged from 40 to 65 years. During the 24-year study period, nearly 5,500 women
were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer. Women with 15 or more moles on
their left arm were 35 percent more likely to develop breast cancer than those
who reported no moles at the beginning of the study. Those with fewer than 15
moles exhibited a slightly higher risk than those without moles.
Among women
with no moles, 8.5 percent developed breast cancer. Among those with one to 14
moles, 11.4 percent developed breast cancer and among those with 15 or more
moles, 11.4 percent developed the disease.
A group of
French researchers reported in
the same issue that women in France, ages 39 to 66 years at the time of
enrollment in the E3N Teachers’ Study Cohort in 1989–1991, exhibited similar
links between moles and breast cancer risk. The researchers followed nearly
90,000 women through 2008 and by that time, a total of almost 6,000 had
developed breast cancer. Women with the most moles had a 13 percent higher risk
of developing breast cancer. However, the association, found only in
premenopausal women, was weak and could not hold after controlling for
non-cancerous breast problems and family history of breast cancer–both factors
that can increase the risk of breast cancer.
Barbara
Fuhrman, assistant professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
in Little Rock and co-author of a commentary that
accompanied the two research reports in the same issue of the journal, said
that women with skin moles should not panic because the results probably do not
reflect accurately on the risk of individual women.
“[The moles]
could be a marker of lifetime exposure to estrogen,” said Fuhrman.
The U.S.
researchers found in a subset of their subjects that estrogen and testosterone
levels were higher in the women with 15 or more moles. They speculated that the
hormone levels may bridge the gap between moles and elevated cancer risk. Even
so, Fuhrman stressed that the increase in risk found by the study was overall
very small.
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