Skip to main content

Breast Cancer Risk Factor

A “risk factor” is anything that increases your risk of developing breast cancer. Many of the most important risk factors for breast cancer are beyond your control, such as age, family history, and medical history. However, there are some risk factors you can control, such as weight, physical activity, and alcohol consumption.

Be sure to talk with your doctor about all of your possible risk factors for breast cancer. There may be steps you can take to lower your risk of breast cancer, and your doctor can help you come up with a plan. Your doctor also needs to be aware of any other risk factors beyond your control, so that he or she has an accurate understanding of your level of breast cancer risk. This can influence recommendations about breast cancer screening — what tests to have and when to start having them.

Risk factors you can control

Weight. Being overweight is associated with increased risk of breast cancer, especially for women after menopause. Fat tissue is the body’s main source of estrogen after menopause, when the ovaries stop producing the hormone. Having more fat tissue means having higher estrogen levels, which can increase breast cancer risk.
Diet. Diet is a suspected risk factor for many types of cancer, including breast cancer, but studies have yet to show for sure which types of foods increase risk. It’s a good idea to restrict sources of red meat and other animal fats (including dairy fat in cheese, milk, and ice cream), because they may contain hormones, other growth factors, antibiotics, and pesticides. Some researchers believe that eating too much cholesterol and other fats are risk factors for cancer, and studies show that eating a lot of red and/or processed meats is associated with a higher risk of breast cancer. A low-fat diet rich in fruits and vegetables is generally recommended. For more information, visit our page on healthy eating to reduce cancer risk in the Nutrition section.
Exercise. Evidence is growing that exercise can reduce breast cancer risk. The American Cancer Society recommends engaging in 45-60 minutes of physical exercise 5 or more days a week.
Alcohol consumption. Studies have shown that breast cancer risk increases with the amount of alcohol a woman drinks. Alcohol can limit your liver’s ability to control blood levels of the hormone estrogen, which in turn can increase risk.
Smoking. Smoking is associated with a small increase in breast cancer risk.
Exposure to estrogen. Because the female hormone estrogen stimulates breast cell growth, exposure to estrogen over long periods of time, without any breaks, can increase the risk of breast cancer. Some of these risk factors are under your control, such as:
  • taking combined hormone replacement therapy (estrogen and progesterone; HRT) for several years or more, or taking estrogen alone for more than 10 years
  • being overweight
  • regularly drinking alcohol
Recent oral contraceptive use. Using oral contraceptives (birth control pills) appears to slightly increase a woman’s risk for breast cancer, but only for a limited period of time. Women who stopped using oral contraceptives more than 10 years ago do not appear to have any increased breast cancer risk.
Stress and anxiety. There is no clear proof that stress and anxiety can increase breast cancer risk. However, anything you can do to reduce your stress and to enhance your comfort, joy, and satisfaction can have a major effect on your quality of life. So-called “mindful measures” (such as meditation, yoga, visualization exercises, and prayer) may be valuable additions to your daily or weekly routine. Some research suggests that these practices can strengthen the immune system.

Risk factors you can’t control

Gender. Being a woman is the most significant risk factor for developing breast cancer. Although men can get breast cancer, too, women’s breast cells are constantly changing and growing, mainly due to the activity of the female hormones estrogen and progesterone. This activity puts them at much greater risk for breast cancer.
Age. Simply growing older is the second biggest risk factor for breast cancer. From age 30 to 39, the risk is 1 in 233, or .43%. That jumps to 1 in 27, or almost 4%, by the time you are in your 60s.
Family history of breast cancer. If you have a first-degree relative (mother, daughter, sister) who has had breast cancer, or you have multiple relatives affected by breast or ovarian cancer (especially before they turned age 50), you could be at higher risk of getting breast cancer.
Personal history of breast cancer. If you have already been diagnosed with breast cancer, your risk of developing it again, either in the same breast or the other breast, is higher than if you never had the disease.
Race. White women are slightly more likely to develop breast cancer than are African American women. Asian, Hispanic, and Native American women have a lower risk of developing and dying from breast cancer.
Radiation therapy to the chest. Having radiation therapy to the chest area as a child or young adult as treatment for another cancer significantly increases breast cancer risk. The increase in risk seems to be highest if the radiation was given while the breasts were still developing (during the teen years).
Breast cellular changes. Unusual changes in breast cells found during a breast biopsy (removal of suspicious tissue for examination under a microscope) can be a risk factor for developing breast cancer. These changes include overgrowth of cells (called hyperplasia) or abnormal (atypical) appearance.
Exposure to estrogen. Because the female hormone estrogen stimulates breast cell growth, exposure to estrogen over long periods of time, without any breaks, can increase the risk of breast cancer. Some of these risk factors are not under your control, such as:
  • starting menstruation (monthly periods) at a young age (before age 12)
  • going through menopause (end of monthly cycles) at a late age (after 55)
  • exposure to estrogens in the environment (such as hormones in meat or pesticides such as DDT, which produce estrogen-like substances when broken down by the body)
Pregnancy and breastfeeding. Pregnancy and breastfeeding reduce the overall number of menstrual cycles in a woman’s lifetime, and this appears to reduce future breast cancer risk. Women who have never had a full-term pregnancy, or had their first full-term pregnancy after age 30, have an increased risk of breast cancer. For women who do have children, breastfeeding may slightly lower their breast cancer risk, especially if they continue breastfeeding for 1 1/2 to 2 years. For many women, however, breastfeeding for this long is neither possible nor practical.
DES exposure. Women who took a medication called diethylstilbestrol (DES), used to prevent miscarriage from the 1940s through the 1960s, have a slightly increased risk of breast cancer. Women whose mothers took DES during pregnancy may have a higher risk of breast cancer as well.
For more detailed information about risk factors for breast cancer, visit our Lower Your Risk section.

Comments

Leigh Griffin said…
Every girl needs to read this article for them to educate and prevent in such disease called breast cancer. Hope to see more updates coming from you.

Popular posts from this blog

Bintang GTM

Seminggu ini menjadi salah satu minggu yang membuatku sedih. Bagaimana tidak, Bintang yang selama ini pemakan segala mendadak GTM. Usut punya usut, dia lagi sariawan. Ini sariawan yang kedua. Setelah yang pertama sembuh, sekarang kok ya nongol lagi. Mana kejadian ini muncul ketika Bintang recovery dari batpil, di mana saat itu makannya tidak seperti biasanya. Ya iyalah, orang sakit mana gampang makannya. Sedih lihat Bintang jadi agak tirus gitu pipinya. Makannya dikit geraknya banyak, nggak bisa diam. Ngocehnya juga banyak. Sedih juga ngebayangin berapa BBnya sekarang. *sembunyikan timbangan. Selama sariawan Bintang jadi sedikit makannya. Di sariawan pertama dia masih mau makan meski harus bubur. Masih gampang juga nyuapinnya. Di sariawan yang kedua susahnya minta ampun, dia lebih sering GTM. Aneka masakan sudah aku coba, aku sengaja memasakkan aneka menu favoritnya. Tapi cuma disentuh seimprit, itupun kalau dia mood. Kesabaran semakin menipis karena khawatir kekurangan asupan...

Cerita Dari Jogja (Part 2)

Bandara Adi Sucipto: tampak depan Kali ini aku akan bercerita tentang bandara yang ada di Jogja, yaitu Adi Sucipto International Airport. Meskipun bertaraf internasional, bandara ini termasuk kecil secara luasan bangunan dan landasan. Beda jauh dengan bandara Juanda di Surabaya atau Soekarno Hatta di Jakarta. Ruangan kedatangan domestiknya nggak terlalu gede, bisa dikatakan kecil malah, "cuma" dilengkapi tiga baggage claim.  boarding room antrian masuk pesawat Untuk boarding room, berbeda dengan bandara lainnya yang bebentuk persegi panjang, di bandara ini bentuknya setengah lingkaran. Karena jumlahnya cuma satu, maka penumpang dari berbagai maskapai akan bercampur baur di sini. Boarding room ini dilengkapi 4 gate untuk naik pesawat. Cuma kemarin pas aku check in , di boarding pas s ku tertera gate 0. Berhubung ini baru pertama kali terjadi, daripada tersesat di bandara, aku bertanya ke salah satu petugas yang ada. Dari beliau, aku mendapatkan informa...

Menggapai Bintang

Mungkin inilah saat yang tepat untukmu pergi Keluar dari semua dominasi Meraih semua mimpi yang kau miliki Mungkin inilah saat yang tepat untukmu pergi Dan aku tak akan menahanmu lagi Meski dengan berat hati Mungkin inilah saat yang tepat untukmu pergi Menyibak langit kelam yang selama ini memayungi Demi menemukan bintang yang paling terang untuk kau jadikan teman hidupmu nanti Hari di mana kemungkinan untuk pergi datang lagi...