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Million Women Study Shows Alcohol Increases Risk For Cancer
February 23, 2010: 0 comment(s)
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How much alcohol can a woman drink and feel safe that it won’t harm her body? One drink? Two drinks? Three drinks? A recent study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute found that even low to moderate alcohol consumption among women significantly increased their risk for cancer and may be responsible for as much as 13% of breast, liver, rectum, stomach and esophageal cancers.
Naomi Allen and her colleagues of the University of Oxford studied the association of alcohol consumption and cancer in 1.28 million middle aged women within the United Kingdom, recruited between 1996 and 2001. The women were followed for an average of seven years, and 68,775 cases of cancer were identified through the National Health Service Central Registries.
The women on average drank one drink per day. Very few drank three or more drinks per day. The type of alcohol consumed (beer, wine or liquor) did not alter the association between alcohol and cancer risk.
The study showed that each of cancer increased with increasing alcohol consumption, as well as certain specific types such as breast, rectum and liver cancer. For example, each additional alcoholic drink consumed per day was associated with 11 additional breast cancers for every 1000 women.
After reviewing this study, Michael Lauer MD and Paul Sortie PhD of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute stated, “From a standpoint of cancer risk, the message of this report could not be clearer. There is no level of alcohol consumption that can be considered safe.”
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