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  1. <html>
  2. <head><title>Breast Cancer</title></head>
  3. <body>
  4. <h1>
  5. Breast Cancer
  6. </h1>
  7. <article class="posted">
  8. <p>
  9. It’s important to know the realities of cancer in the population, the death rate from cancer, and the
  10. effects of its aggressive diagnosis and treatment. Appreciating those, I think the need for a new
  11. attitude toward cancer can be seen.
  12. </p>
  13. <p>
  14. Official US data for the years 1990 to 1993 showed 505,300 cancer deaths in 1990, and 529,900 cancer
  15. deaths in 1993. This was an increase of roughly 1.3% per year (which was faster than the population
  16. growth) during the time in which Rodu and Cole (1996) and agencies of the U.S. government claimed the
  17. death rate was <strong><em>decreasing</em></strong> one half percent (0.5%) per year.
  18. </p>
  19. <p>
  20. This increase happened despite the abnormal population bulge in the number of people between the ages of
  21. 35 and 50, resulting from the postwar baby boom. Cancer incidence is about ten times higher among the
  22. older population than in this younger age range, so in this abnormally structured population, the death
  23. rate from cancer is much lower than it would be if the population composition were the same as before
  24. the war, and it is lower than it will be in ten or twenty years, when the population bulge reaches the
  25. prime cancer years.
  26. </p>
  27. <p>
  28. In 1994, total cancer deaths increased to 536,900 (an increase of 1.32% over 1993). The crude death rate
  29. per 100,000 population was 203.2 in 1990, in 1993 it was 205.6, in 1994 it had increased to 206. <strong
  30. >This, despite the population distortion caused by the baby boom,</strong> causing a scarcity of people
  31. in the age groups with the highest rates of cancer mortality.
  32. </p>
  33. <p>
  34. In the U.S. in 1994 there were altogether 2,286,000 deaths. In a population of about 260 million, this
  35. was a death rate of less than 1% per year (about 0.88%). The chance of dying that year for any person
  36. was less than one in a hundred. That doesn’t mean that life expectancy is over 100 years, but that would
  37. be implied if we ignored the population bulge of the baby boomers, as the cancer statisticians are
  38. doing.
  39. </p>
  40. <p>
  41. When the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and every major medical journal in the United
  42. States lies about the simple statistics of cancer death rates, it’s clear that very powerful and
  43. dangerous social forces are operating. Anyone who knows about the baby boom that started right after the
  44. second world war must also realize that in 1940, at the end of the great depression, when infant and
  45. childhood mortality was very high and people postponed having children, the population had a
  46. disproportionate number of old people, and that it would be outrageous to use the rate of cancer in the
  47. pre-war population to evaluate the rate of cancer in the post-war population. But that is what is being
  48. done, and the mass media are helping to prevent the public from questioning the official story about
  49. cancer.
  50. </p>
  51. <p>
  52. If the health of the population in 1940 is to be compared to that of a very differently constituted
  53. later population, the appropriate method is to compare the rate of death among people of a certain age.
  54. The death rate from leukemia, especially among children, was greatly increased in the post-war years,
  55. when people were being exposed to radiation from atomic bomb tests. The death rates among adults of
  56. various ages, from breast cancer, prostate cancer, and melanoma have steadily increased. Rodu and Cole,
  57. who declared victory in the war against cancer, said the decline in total cancer mortality began in
  58. 1991. (Cole and Rodu, 1996) If lung cancer is excluded, <strong>they say mortality from other cancers
  59. has been declining since 1950! (“The fifty-year decline of cancer in America,”</strong> Rodu and
  60. Cole, 2001.) The first time I saw this bizarre use of “age restandardization” was when Professor Bruce
  61. Ames was on a lecture tour for the American Cancer Society, and was speaking to the biology department
  62. at the University of Oregon. He showed a graph indicating that the mortality curves for most types of
  63. cancer in the U.S. had begun their downward curve in the late 1940s just after the A.C.S. came onto the
  64. scene. Even though I think the A.C.S. probably initiated the practice of age-standardizing with
  65. reference to the 1940 population, they don’t always find that date suitable for their purposes. In
  66. fund-raising literature showing their past success in curing childhood leukemia, they restandardized
  67. mortality with reference to the postwar year when the leukemia death rate was at its highest, with the
  68. result that their cures appeared to be steadily lowering the death rate. But the incidence rate varied
  69. according to the intensity of the radioactive intensity that pregnant women were exposed to, and so both
  70. the incidence and the mortality fell after atmospheric testing was stopped.
  71. </p>
  72. <p>
  73. Government officials, editors of the big medical journals, professors and broadcasters, have been able
  74. to get away with this huge statistical fraud. I suspect that they will soon feel encouraged to simply
  75. make up the data that they want, because eventually “age standardization” isn’t going to work to hide
  76. the actual increases in mortality. Since people with cancer usually die of something else, such as a
  77. stroke or heart failure, it will be no trick at all to make cancer mortality decline to be replaced by
  78. other causes of death. The precedent for such fabulizing of data exists in the FDA’s approval of AZT,
  79. and other less notorious drugs.
  80. </p>
  81. <p>
  82. Radiation, estrogen, and a variety of chemical pollutants are known to be the major causes of breast
  83. cancer, but the efforts of the cancer establishment have been directed toward denying that these
  84. avoidable agents are the cause of the great increase in breast cancer during the last several decades.
  85. The cancer industry, including major producers of chemotherapy drugs, subsidizes the American Cancer
  86. Society and “Breast Cancer Awareness Week,” and it is in their interest to convince the public that
  87. early detection and conventional treatment with surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation are winning the war
  88. against cancer. There is always light at the end of the tunnel, in the war against cancer, just as there
  89. was in the Vietnam war. Their consistent effort to dissuade the government from acting to reduce the
  90. public’s exposure to the known causes of cancer should make it clear that they are in the business of
  91. treating cancer, not eliminating it.
  92. </p>
  93. <p>
  94. In the 1960s I read some articles in a small town newspaper about Leonell Strong’s cancer research, and
  95. his treatment by the American Cancer Society and the Salk Institute. Leonell Strong had developed
  96. strains of mice for use in cancer research. In some of the strains, 100% of the females developed
  97. mammary cancer. Strong had demonstrated that these strains had very high levels of estrogen. He showed
  98. me mice that he had treated with simple extracts of liver, that were free of cancer, and whose
  99. descendants remained free of cancer for several generations.
  100. </p>
  101. <p>
  102. Strong had received his PhD in genetics under T. H. Morgan. For a person trained in classical genetics,
  103. and who had spent his career developing the supposedly genetically determined cancer trait, the
  104. elimination of the trait by a few injections must have been hard to understand, but at least he tried to
  105. understand it.
  106. </p>
  107. <p>
  108. When he had earlier demonstrated the presence of a virus in the milk of cancer-prone mice, and when he
  109. showed the role of heredity in cancer, he was popular with the cancer business, but when he showed that
  110. “genetic” cancer could be eradicated with a simple treatment, he became the object of official abuse. He
  111. said that the Salk institute had offered him a position to induce him to move with his large colony of
  112. mice from New York to San Diego, but when he arrived he found that he had no job, and his records of
  113. decades of research had been lost. He said that a memo which was discovered in a lawsuit revealed that
  114. the institute had just wanted his mice, and never intended to give him the promised job. For the cancer
  115. establishment, his discovery of a way to prevent cancer was not welcome.
  116. </p>
  117. <p>
  118. In 1969, two years before the war against cancer had begun pouring public money into the pockets of the
  119. cancer establishment, Harry Rubin gave a lecture that criticized the cancer establishment’s claim that
  120. it was curing cancer. He cited a study by a pathologist who had looked for cancer in the tissues of
  121. people who had been killed in accidents. He found identifiable cancers in the tissues of everyone over
  122. the age of fifty that he examined. If everyone over 50 has histologically detectable cancer, <strong
  123. >then the use of biopsy specimens as the basis for determining whether a person needs treatment has no
  124. scientific basis.</strong>
  125. </p>
  126. <p>
  127. The definition of a disease, and the recognition of its presence, has an important place in medicine,
  128. but understanding its cause or causes is essential for both treatment and prevention. The dominant
  129. belief in medicine is that diseases are significantly caused by “genes,” including diseases such as
  130. cancer, diabetes, psychoses, and neurological diseases. In Israel, ethnic groups that had never had much
  131. diabetes before immigrating, within a single generation had diabetes as often as other Israelis. Shortly
  132. after insulin became available for the treatment of diabetes, the incidence of the disease in the U.S.
  133. began to increase. The simple death rate from diabetes per 100,000 population is now higher than it was
  134. in 1920, before insulin treatment became available. Neurological diseases and autoimmune diseases, along
  135. with diabetes and cancer, have increased greatly in recent generations. These simply aren’t genetic
  136. diseases, and there should be a shift of resources away from useless or harmful treatments toward their
  137. prevention.
  138. </p>
  139. <p>
  140. Even when a disease’s cause isn’t clearly understood, it is essential to use logical thinking in
  141. diagnosing its presence. The presence of a certain gene or “genetic marker” is often thought to have
  142. great diagnostic significance, which it rarely has. But even gross “signs” of a disease can be used
  143. diagnostically <strong>only if we know that similar signs aren’t present in perfectly healthy
  144. people.</strong> When pains are thought to be the result of a herniated intervertebral disk, x-ray
  145. pictures may be produced as confirmation of the diagnosis. But when people without pains are just as
  146. likely to have herniated disks (about 2/3 of normal people have them), the diagnosis fails to be
  147. convincing. When x-rays or MRIs show “plaques” in the head, multiple sclerosis is often “confirmed,” but
  148. when normal medical students show just as many brain plaques, the diagnosis must be questioned.
  149. Similarly, when mature people who were perfectly healthy until they were killed by an accident are found
  150. to always have identifiable cancers, any diagnosis of cancer that is based on a similar histological
  151. specimen must be reconsidered.
  152. </p>
  153. <p>
  154. By diagnosing something that is as common and trivial as dandruff as “cancer,” physicians can get a very
  155. high rate of cures, whether they use surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy. Abnormal cellular
  156. proliferation is usually harmless, but it has become an important part of a business that makes several
  157. billion dollars per year, with no definite benefits except the financial benefits for those in the
  158. business.
  159. </p>
  160. <p>
  161. Before cancer treatment became culturally practically obligatory, and when fewer people died of cancer,
  162. some people lived into old age with clearly “malignant” cancers, and died of some other cause. The
  163. policy of leaving a cancer alone is now established for prostate cancer in old men. Until there is clear
  164. evidence to the contrary, a similar policy might be appropriate for many kinds of cancer.
  165. </p>
  166. <p>
  167. If every year more people are treated for cancer, and every year more people die of cancer, one simply
  168. wonders whether fewer people would die if few were treated.
  169. </p>
  170. <p>
  171. If the first rule of medicine is to do no harm, then the second rule, growing out of the first, would
  172. have to be to give no treatment without knowing what is being treated, and to have a valid basis for
  173. believing that the damage done by the treatment is not worse than the damage that the disease would
  174. cause. If cancer specialists haven’t demonstrated that their treatments improve their patients’
  175. situation, then their professional activities aren’t justified; the statistics suggest that they aren’t.
  176. </p>
  177. <p>
  178. There simply isn’t a valid base of knowledge about the natural history of cancer development in humans
  179. to permit a valid judgment to be made about the meaning of particular signs or indicators or
  180. histological structures. The extensive use of mammograms has increased the diagnosis of “ductal
  181. carcinoma <strong><em>in situ</em></strong>” by more than 1000% (a 16- or 18-fold increase in some
  182. hospitals, and expected to double in the next decade), increasing the number of mastectomies and other
  183. treatments, <strong><em>but the increased treatments and early diagnosis haven’t produced any visible
  184. change in the death rate.
  185. </em></strong>
  186. </p>
  187. <p>
  188. The pathologists talk knowingly of “pre-neoplastic” conditions that indicate an increased risk of
  189. malignancy, but instead of data, what they have is an ideology about the nature of cancer. When they say
  190. that a growth pattern is premalignant or that a cell has a malignant structure, they might as well be
  191. talking about goblins, because the scientific basis for what they are saying is nothing but a belief in
  192. the ideology that cancer is “clonal,” that a particular cancer derives from a <strong>single defective
  193. cell.</strong> They are so self-assured, and have so many sources to cite about the “clonal nature
  194. of cancer,” that it seems impolite to suggest that they might simply be misusing language and logic.
  195. </p>
  196. <p>
  197. Isn’t a person derived from a single cell, and so, in that sense, “clonal”? As organs differentiate in
  198. the development of the organism, can’t organs be traced back to the cells from which they developed?
  199. Isn’t every tissue “a clone” in that sense? What is it that makes the “clonal” nature of cancer tissue
  200. so special? Isn’t it just that a nasty, mean, malignant tissue is, mentally, traced back to a
  201. “malignant” cell, by analogy with the way good tissues are traced back to good cells? If the tumor is
  202. odious, it must derive from an odious cell, and what could make that cell so hateful if it is
  203. genetically identical to the good cells? Therefore, the goblin reasoning goes, a genetic mutation must
  204. have produced the evil cell.
  205. </p>
  206. <p>
  207. The actual evidence is that there are broad changes in tissues preceding the appearance of cancer. The
  208. goblin theory explains this by saying that a multitude of “precancerous” mutations occurred before the
  209. mutant cancer cell appeared. Harry Rubin has carefully shown experimentally and logically that cancer
  210. precedes the genetic changes that occur in tumors. But the ideology that cancer is the result of a
  211. genetic mutation forces its devotees to say that the genetic changes that can be found in a mature tumor
  212. must have occurred in one cell that was previously not malignant. An effect is identified as a cause.
  213. </p>
  214. <p>
  215. The clonal-goblin theory of cancer leads logically to the conclusion that the cancer clone must be
  216. exorcised by surgery, chemotherapy, and/or radiation.
  217. </p>
  218. <p>
  219. The biological theory of cancer, on the other hand, is inclined to view the normal and abnormal
  220. development of cells in terms of the cells’ responses to conditions.
  221. </p>
  222. <p>
  223. Estrogen and ionizing radiation are the most clearly documented causes of breast cancer. Their
  224. excitatory effects lead to inflammation, edema, fibrosis, and interruption of intercellular regulatory
  225. processes. Radiation is estrogenic, and increased estrogenic stimulation produces growth and temporary
  226. loss of differentiated functions. Estrogen and radiation aren’t the only things that can cause these
  227. systematic changes in the structure of tissues--for example, vitamin A deficiencies, hypothyroidism,
  228. chlorinated hydrocarbons, irritation, and lack of oxygen can cause similar changes--but estrogen and
  229. irradiation have been studied enough to give us a fairly distinct picture of the real processes involved
  230. in the development of cancer.
  231. </p>
  232. <p>
  233. Polyunsaturated fats are another clearly identified cause of cancer, especially breast cancer. These
  234. fats synergize with estrogen, and sensitize to radiation. Their effects on the mother can be seen in the
  235. offspring, as an increased tendency to develop breast or prostate cancer.
  236. </p>
  237. <p>
  238. An individual’s hormone balance can be disrupted by exposure to radiation, estrogens, or unsaturated
  239. fats. The hormonal balance of the parent is imprinted upon the offspring, acting on the chromosomes, the
  240. liver, brain, genitals, pituitary, bones--in fact, the prenatal imprint can probably be found everywhere
  241. in the offspring.
  242. </p>
  243. <p>
  244. <strong>It’s easy to reduce our exposure to radiation, by avoiding mammograms, bone density scans, and
  245. other x-rays of all sorts. Ultrasound and MRI can produce good images of any tissue without the
  246. deadly effects of ionizing radiation.
  247. </strong>
  248. </p>
  249. <p>
  250. Polyunsaturated fats can be reduced by careful selection of foods, but the food industry is finding ways
  251. to contaminate traditionally safe foods, such as beef and milk, by using new kinds of animal feed.
  252. Still, milk, cheese, beef, and lamb are safe, considering their high nutritional content, and the
  253. remarkable purification that occurs in the rumen of cows, sheep, and goats. Some studies suggest a
  254. protective effect from saturated fat (Chajes, et al., 1999.)
  255. </p>
  256. <p>
  257. Estrogenic influences can be significantly reduced by avoiding foods such as soy products and
  258. unsaturated fats, by eating enough protein to optimize the liver’s elimination of estrogen, and by using
  259. things such as bulk-forming foods (raw carrots, potatoes, and milk, for example) that stimulate bowel
  260. action and prevent reabsorption of estrogens from the intestine. Avoiding hypothyroidism is essential
  261. for preventing chronic retention or formation of too much estrogen.
  262. </p>
  263. <p>
  264. Some studies show that dietary starch, rather than fat, is associated with breast cancer. Starch
  265. strongly stimulates insulin secretion, and insulin stimulates the formation of estrogen.
  266. </p>
  267. <p>
  268. Estrogen is formed in fat cells under the influence of cortisol, and this formation is suppressed by
  269. progesterone and thyroid. Postmenopausal obesity is associated with increased estrogen and breast
  270. cancer. The prevention of weight gain, and supplementation with thyroid and progesterone if necessary,
  271. should be protective against many types of cancer, especially breast, kidney, and uterine cancer.
  272. </p>
  273. <p>
  274. Prenatal or early life exposure to estrogens, including phytoestrogens, or to irradiation, or to
  275. polyunsaturated oils, increases the incidence of mammary cancers in adulthood.
  276. </p>
  277. <p>
  278. Protein deficiency prenatally or early in life causes a life-long excess of serotonin. Feeding an excess
  279. of tryptophan, the precursor of serotonin, during pregnancy produces pituitary and mammary tumors in the
  280. offspring. Serotonin, besides being closely associated with the effects of estrogen (e.g., mediating its
  281. stimulation of prolactin secretion) and polyunsaturated fats, can be metabolized into carcinogens.
  282. </p>
  283. <p>
  284. Prenatal protein deficiency and excess unsaturated oils predispose to a developmental pattern involving
  285. hypothyroidism and hyperestrogenism<strong>;</strong> puberty occurs at an earlier age, along with a
  286. tendency to gain weight. Inflammatory processes (e.g., “autoimmune diseases”) are usually intensified
  287. under those conditions. Inflammation itself increases the effects of estrogen and serotonin.
  288. </p>
  289. <p>
  290. Both preventively and therapeutically, the use of the antiinflammatory and antioxidative substances such
  291. as aspirin, caffeine, progesterone, and thyroid hormone would seem appropriate. Aspirin is coming to be
  292. widely accepted as an anticancer agent, and at moderate doses can cause cancer cells to die. It, like
  293. progesterone and thyroid, has a wide variety of anti-estrogenic effects. Especially when a tumor is
  294. painfully inflamed, aspirin’s effects can be quick and dramatic. However, people aren’t likely to be
  295. pleased if their cancer doctor tells them to “take aspirin and call me in six months.” Aspirin’s
  296. reputation for causing stomach bleeding causes people to avoid it, even when the alternative is
  297. something that’s seriously toxic to other organs, and it might just seem too ordinary to be considered
  298. as a powerful anticancer drug.
  299. </p>
  300. <p>
  301. Because of the toxic (carcinogenic, and anti-respiratory) effects of the “essential fatty acids,” which
  302. are usually stored in the tissues in very large quantities, it’s important to avoid the stresses or
  303. hunger that would release the fats into the blood stream. Estrogens and adrenalin and serotonin and
  304. growth hormone, and prolonged darkness, increase the release of the free fatty acids. Frequent meals,
  305. including some saturated fats such as coconut oil, and a balance of protein, sugars, and salts, will
  306. minimize the release of stored fats.
  307. </p>
  308. <p>
  309. The population trends toward greater obesity and earlier puberty, both of which are associated with a
  310. higher risk of breast cancer, suggest that the war against cancer is far from over. In the 19th century
  311. when the incidence of breast cancer was much lower than it is now, puberty usually occurred around the
  312. age of 17. In countries with a low incidence of breast cancer, puberty still occurs in the middle to
  313. late teens. People who are now 100 generally had puberty years later than girls do now. The biological
  314. changes now seen in children in the U.S. suggest that the incidence of degenerative diseases of all
  315. sorts is likely to increase as these children grow up.
  316. </p>
  317. <p>
  318. A metabolic approach to the prevention and treatment of cancer would have many beneficial side effects,
  319. such as producing generally healthier, happier and brighter babies.
  320. </p>
  321. <hr />
  322. <p><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></p>
  323. <p>
  324. Radiat Res 1998 Sep;150(3):330-48 <strong>Mortality in beagles irradiated during prenatal and postnatal
  325. development. II. Contribution of benign and malignant neoplasia.</strong> Benjamin SA, Lee AC,
  326. Angleton GM, Saunders WJ, Keefe TJ, Mallinckrodt CH. To evaluate the lifetime carcinogenic hazards of
  327. exposure to ionizing radiation during development, 1,680 beagles received whole-body exposures to 60Co
  328. gamma rays or sham exposures. Eight groups of 120 dogs each received mean doses of 15.6-17.5 or
  329. 80.8-88.3 cGy in early, mid- or late gestation, at 8, 28 or 55 days postcoitus or at 2 days after birth.
  330. Another group of 120 dogs received a mean dose of 82.6 cGy as 70-day-old juveniles and one group of 240
  331. dogs received a mean dose of 81.2 cGy as 365-day-old young adults. Sham irradiations were given to 360
  332. controls. Sexes were equally represented. In 1,343 dogs allowed to live out their life span, neoplasia
  333. was a major disease, contributing to mortality in 40% of the dogs. There was a significant increase in
  334. benign and malignant neoplasms occurring in young dogs (&lt;4 years old), including fatal malignancies,
  335. after irradiation in the perinatal (late fetal and neonatal) periods. The lifetime incidence of fatal
  336. neoplasms was also increased in dogs irradiated perinatally. Three malignancies-lymphomas,
  337. hemangiosarcomas and mammary carcinomas-accounted for 51% of all fatal tumors. There was an apparent
  338. lifetime increase and earlier onset of lymphomas in dogs exposed as fetuses. Fatal hemangiosarcomas were
  339. increased in dogs irradiated early and late in gestation. Fatal mammary carcinomas were not increased by
  340. irradiation, although non-fatal carcinomas were increased after perinatal exposure. Myeloproliferative
  341. disorders and central nervous system astrocytomas appeared to be increased in perinatally irradiated
  342. dogs. These data suggest that irradiation in both the fetal and neonatal periods is associated with
  343. increased early onset and lifetime cancer risk.
  344. </p>
  345. <p>
  346. Int J Cancer 1999 Nov 26;83(5):585-90. <strong>Fatty-acid composition in serum phospholipids and risk of
  347. breast cancer: an incident case-control study in Sweden.</strong> Chajes V, Hulten K, Van Kappel AL,
  348. Winkvist A, Kaaks R, Hallmans G, Lenner P, Riboli E. “. . . women in the<strong><hr /></strong>”
  349. </p>
  350. <p>
  351. Tumori 2000 Jan-Feb;86(1):12-6 <strong>Factors of risk for breast cancer influencing post-menopausal
  352. long-term hormone replacement therapy.</strong> Chiechi LM, Secreto G. <strong>“. . . growing
  353. evidence points to increased breast cancer risk in HRT long-term users, and the adverse effect
  354. would, obviously, overwhelm any other benefit. At present, the risk/benefit ratio of HRT is an
  355. object of hot debate . . . .”
  356. </strong>“We conclude that some biologic and clinical markers, namely android obesity, bone density,
  357. mammographic density, androgen and estrogen circulating levels, alcohol consumption, benign breast
  358. disease, and familiarity, should be carefully considered before prescribing long-term HRT. <strong>Our
  359. analysis suggests that HRT could increase the risk of breast cancer and useless in preventing
  360. coronary heart disease and osteoporotic fractures</strong> when administered in women with
  361. positivity for one or more of these markers.”
  362. </p>
  363. <p>
  364. Cancer 1996 Nov 15;78(10):2045-8. <strong>Declining cancer mortality in the United States.</strong> Cole
  365. P, Rodu B.
  366. </p>
  367. <p>
  368. <strong><em>Preventing Breast Cancer:</em></strong>
  369. <strong><em>The story of a Major, Proven, Preventable Cause of This Disease.</em></strong> John W.
  370. Gofman, M.D., Ph.D. 1996. “This book uncovers the major cause of the recent breast-cancer incidence in
  371. the USA. The author shows that past exposure to ionizing radiation --- primarily medical x-rays --- is
  372. responsible for about 75 percent of the breast-cancer problem in the United States. The good news: Since
  373. the radiation dosage given today by medical procedures can be significantly reduced without interfering
  374. with a single useful procedure, numerous future cases of breast-cancer can be prevented. The author
  375. recommends specific actions to start breast-cancer prevention now, not ten years from now.”
  376. </p>
  377. <p>
  378. Am J Public Health 1998 Mar;88(3):458-60. <strong>Geographic variations in breast cancer mortality: do
  379. higher rates imply elevated incidence or poorer survival?</strong> Goodwin JS, Freeman JL, Freeman
  380. D, Nattinger AB. <strong>“Mortality rates from breast cancer are approximately 25% higher for women in
  381. the northeastern United States than for women in the South or West.</strong> This study examined the
  382. hypothesis that the elevation is due to decreased survival rather than increased incidence.” “The
  383. elevated mortality in the Northeast is apparent only in older women. For women aged 65<strong><hr
  384. /></strong>CONCLUSIONS: Those seeking to explain the excess breast cancer mortality in the Northeast
  385. should assess survival and should examine differences in cancer control practices that affect survival.”
  386. </p>
  387. <p>
  388. Nutrition 1999 May;15(5):392-401 <strong>The influence of maternal diet on breast cancer risk among
  389. female offspring.</strong> Hilakivi-Clarke L, Clarke R, Lippman M. The induction of breast cancer is
  390. a long process, containing a series of biological events that drive a normal mammary cell towards
  391. malignant growth. However, it is not known when the initiation of breast cancer occurs. One hypothesis
  392. is that a high estrogenic environment during the perinatal period increases subsequent breast cancer
  393. risk. There are many sources of extragonadal estrogens, particularly in the diet. The purpose of this
  394. paper is to review the evidence that a high maternal intake of dietary fats increases serum estrogens
  395. during pregnancy and increases breast cancer risk in daughters. Our animal<strong>
  396. studies show that a high maternal consumption of corn oil consisting mainly of linoleic acid
  397. (omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid, PUFA), increases both circulating estradiol (E2) levels during
  398. pregnancy and the risk of developing</strong> carcinogen-induced mammary tumors among the female rat
  399. offspring. A similar increase in breast cancer risk occurs in female offspring exposed to injections of
  400. E2 through their pregnant mother. Our data suggest that the mechanisms by which an early exposure to
  401. dietary fat and/or estrogens increases breast cancer risk is related to reduced differentiation of the
  402. mammary epithelial tree and increased number of mammary epithelial cell structures that are known to the
  403. sites of neoplastic transformation. These findings may reflect our data of the reduced estrogen receptor
  404. protein levels and protein kinase C activity in the developing mammary glands of female rats exposed to
  405. a high-fat diet in utero. In summary, a high dietary linoleic acid intake can elevate pregnancy estrogen
  406. levels and this, possibly by altering mammary gland morphology and expression of fat- and/or
  407. estrogen-regulated genes, can increase breast cancer risk in the offspring. If true for women, breast
  408. cancer prevention in daughters may include modulating the mother's pregnancy intake of some dietary
  409. fats.
  410. </p>
  411. <p>
  412. Mol Cell Biochem 1998 Nov;188(1-2):5-12 <strong>Timing of dietary fat exposure and mammary
  413. tumorigenesis: role of estrogen receptor and protein kinase C activity.</strong> Hilakivi-Clarke L,
  414. Clarke R. The possible association between a high fat diet and increased breast cancer risk has remained
  415. controversial. This largely reflects the conflicting data obtained from migrant, case control and animal
  416. studies, which generally support this association, and cohort studies which often fail to show a link
  417. between fat and breast cancer. The mammary gland is particularly sensitive to estrogens during fetal
  418. development, leading us to hypothesize that dietary fat levels during this period may significantly
  419. influence breast cancer risk. Using chemically-induced mammary tumors in rats as our experimental model,
  420. <strong>we have demonstrated the ability of a maternal diet, high in the polyunsaturated fatty acid
  421. (PUFA) linoleic acid, to alter mammary gland differentiation, accelerate the onset of sexual
  422. maturation, and increase breast cancer risk.</strong> The mammary glands of female rats exposed to a
  423. high-fat diet in utero have more of the undifferentiated structures (terminal end buds) and fewer of the
  424. differentiated structures (alveolar buds) than the glands of rats exposed to a low-fat diet in utero.
  425. Furthermore, these mammary glands contain lower levels of total estrogen receptors and have reduced
  426. total protein kinase C activity. <strong>These effects appear to be mediated by an increase in the serum
  427. estradiol levels of pregnancy, which are elevated at least 30% in pregnant dams fed a high-fat
  428. diet.</strong> Furthermore, the administration of estradiol to pregnant dams produces effects on
  429. mammary gland development, onset of puberty and sensitivity to chemical carcinogenesis comparable to
  430. those seen in the offspring of rats fed a high fat diet during pregnancy. Our results, thus, support the
  431. hypothesis based on epidemiological<strong>
  432. data that high maternal estrogen levels increase daughters' breast cancer risk. The results also
  433. suggest that a high-fat diet may be an important factor in increasing pregnancy estrogenic activity.
  434. </strong>
  435. </p>
  436. <p>
  437. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1997 Aug 19;94(17):9372-7. <strong>A maternal diet high in n - 6
  438. polyunsaturated fats alters mammary gland development, puberty onset, and breast cancer risk among
  439. female rat offspring.</strong> Hilakivi-Clarke L, Clarke R, Onojafe I, Raygada M, Cho E, Lippman M.
  440. <strong>We hypothesized that feeding pregnant rats with a high-fat diet would increase both circulating
  441. 17beta-estradiol (E2) levels in the dams and the risk of developing carcinogen-induced mammary
  442. tumors among their female offspring. Pregnant rats were fed isocaloric diets containing 12% or 16%
  443. (low fat) or 43%</strong> or 46% (high fat) of calories from corn oil, which primarily contains the
  444. n - 6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) linoleic acid, throughout pregnancy. The<strong>
  445. plasma concentrations of E2 were significantly higher in pregnant females fed a high n - 6 PUFA
  446. diet. The female offspring of these rats were fed with a laboratory chow from birth onward, and when
  447. exposed to</strong>7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene had a significantly higher mammary tumor incidence
  448. (60% vs. 30%) and shorter latency for tumor appearance (11.4 +/- 0.5 weeks vs. 14.2 +/- 0.6 weeks) than
  449. the offspring of the low-fat mothers. The high-fat offspring also had puberty onset at a younger age,
  450. and their mammary glands contained significantly higher numbers of the epithelial structures that are
  451. the targets for malignant transformation. Comparable changes in puberty onset, mammary gland morphology,
  452. and tumor incidence were observed in the offspring of rats treated daily with 20 ng of E2 during
  453. pregnancy. These data,<strong>
  454. if extrapolated to humans, may explain the link among diet, early puberty onset, mammary parenchymal
  455. patterns, and breast cancer risk, and indicate that an in utero exposure to a diet high in n - 6
  456. PUFA and/or estrogenic stimuli may be critical for affecting breast cancer risk.
  457. </strong>
  458. </p>
  459. <p>
  460. Oncol Rep 1998 May-Jun;5(3):609-16 <strong>Maternal genistein exposure mimics the effects of estrogen on
  461. mammary gland development in female mouse offspring.</strong> Hilakivi-Clarke L, Cho E, Clarke R.
  462. Human and animal data indicate that a high maternal estrogen exposure during pregnancy increases breast
  463. cancer risk among daughters. This may reflect an increase in the epithelial structures that are the
  464. sites for malignant transformation, i.e., terminal end buds (TEBs), and a reduction in epithelial
  465. differentiation in the mammary gland. Some phytoestrogens, such as genistein which is a major component
  466. in soy-based foods, and zearalenone, a mycotoxin found in agricultural products, have estrogenic effects
  467. on the reproductive system, breast and brain. The present study examined whether in utero exposure to
  468. genistein or zearalenone influences mammary gland development. Pregnant mice were injected daily with i)
  469. 20 ng estradiol (E2); ii) 20 microg genistein; iii) 2 microg zearalenone; iv) 2 microg tamoxifen (TAM),
  470. a partial estrogen receptor agonist; or v) oil-vehicle between days 15 and 20 of gestation. E2,
  471. genistein, zearalenone, and tamoxifen all increased the density of TEBs in the mammary glands. Genistein
  472. reduced, and zearalenone increased, epithelial differentiation. Zearalenone also increased epithelial
  473. density, when compared with the vehicle-controls. None of the treatments had permanent effects on
  474. circulating E2 levels. Maternal exposure to E2 accelerated body weight gain, physical maturation (eyelid
  475. opening), and puberty onset (vaginal opening) in the female offspring. Genistein and tamoxifen had
  476. similar effects on puberty onset than E2. Zearalenone caused persistent cornification of the estrus
  477. smears. These findings indicate that maternal exposure to physiological doses of genistein mimics the
  478. effects of E2 on the mammary gland and reproductive systems in the offspring. Thus, our results suggest
  479. that genistein acts as an estrogen in utero, and may increase the incidence of mammary tumors if given
  480. through a pregnant mother. The estrogenic effects of zearalenone on the mammary gland, in contrast, are
  481. probably counteracted by the permanent changes in estrus cycling.
  482. </p>
  483. <p>
  484. Am J Public Health 1991 Apr;81(4):462-5 <strong>Does increased detection account for the rising
  485. incidence of breast cancer?</strong> Liff JM, Sung JF, Chow WH, Greenberg RS, Flanders WD. “The
  486. incidence of breast cancer has been increasing over time in the United States.” “To determine the role
  487. of screening in this increase, trends in the incidence of in situ and invasive carcinoma of the breast
  488. were evaluated using records of the metropolitan Atlanta SEER program between 1979 and 1986.” “The
  489. average annual age-adjusted incidence of invasive disease rose 29 percent among Whites and 41 percent
  490. among Blacks. Incidence increased in all age groups.” “Asymptomatic tumors accounted for only 40 percent
  491. of the increased incidence among whites and 25 percent of the increased incidence among blacks, with
  492. mammography as the principal contributing procedure.” “These data suggest that increased detection
  493. accounts for some but not all of the rising incidence of breast cancer in the United States.”
  494. </p>
  495. <p>
  496. J Clin Oncol 2001 Jan 1;19(1):239-41. <strong>The fifty-year decline of cancer in america.</strong> Rodu
  497. B, Cole P. Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, and the Department of Epidemiology, School of
  498. Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL. PURPOSE: From 1950 to 1990, the
  499. overall cancer mortality rate increased steadily in the United States, a trend which ran counter to
  500. declining mortality from other major diseases. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of
  501. lung cancer on all-cancer mortality over the past 50 years. METHODS: Data from the National Centers for
  502. Health Statistics were used to develop mortality rates for all forms of cancer combined, lung cancer,
  503. and other-cancer (all-cancer minus lung cancer) from 1950 to 1998. RESULTS: <strong>When lung cancer is
  504. excluded, mortality from all other forms of cancer combined declined continuously from 1950 to 1998,
  505. dropping 25% during this period. The decline in other-cancer mortality was approximately 0.4%
  506. annually from 1950 to 1990 but accelerated to 0.9% per year from 1990 to 1996 and to 2.2% per year
  507. from 1996 to 1998.</strong>
  508. <strong><em>CONCLUSION: The long-term decline is likely due primarily to improvements in medical care,
  509. including screening, diagnosis, and treatment.</em></strong>
  510. </p>
  511. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  512. <p>
  513. J Mammary Gland Biol Neoplasia 1998 Jan;3(1):49-61 <strong>Role of hormones in mammary cancer initiation
  514. and progression.</strong> Russo IH, Russo J. “Administration of carcinogen to pregnant, parous or
  515. hormonally treated virgin rats, on the other hand, fails to elicit a tumorigenic response, a phenomenon
  516. attributed to the higher degree of differentiation of the mammary gland induced by the hormonal
  517. stimulation of pregnancy. In women a majority of breast cancers that are initially hormone dependent are
  518. manifested during the postmenopausal period. Estradiol plays a crucial role in their development and
  519. evolution.”
  520. </p>
  521. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  522. <p>
  523. Hum Reprod 1999 Aug;14(8):2155-61<strong>
  524. Tryptophan ingestion by pregnant rats induces pituitary and mammary tumours in the adult female
  525. offspring.
  526. </strong>Santana C, Martin L, Valladares F, Diaz-Flores L, Santana-Herrera C, Milena A, Rodriguez Diaz M
  527. “. . . maternal ingestion of tryptophan induced a marked rise in 665-day-old offspring in the incidence
  528. of both pituitary prolactinomas (62%) and mammary adenomas (49%). Present data suggest that tryptophan
  529. regulates serotonergic differentiation during early development. A transitory modification of the
  530. tryptophan concentration in the fetal brain induces a permanent increase in hypothalamic serotonin level
  531. and, in addition to modifying the release of prolactin, increases the incidence of tumours in the
  532. hypophysis and mammary gland.”
  533. </p>
  534. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  535. <p>
  536. JAMA 1977 Feb 21;237(8):789-90. <strong>Breast cancer induced by radiation. Relation to mammography and
  537. treatment of acne.</strong> Simon N.<strong></strong>This communication reports cases of 16 women in
  538. whom cancer of the breast developed after radiation therapy for acne or hirsutism, suggesting another
  539. group at higher risk than is generally expected for cancer of the breast.<strong>
  540. It is prudent to regard the carcinogenic effect of radiation on the breast as proportional to dose
  541. without a threshold. Mammography in young women should be ordered only selectively, not for
  542. screening.</strong>
  543. </p>
  544. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  545. <p>
  546. Rev Interam Radiol 1977 Oct;2(4):199-203. <strong>Cancer of the breast--induction by radiation and role
  547. of mammography.</strong> Simon N.
  548. </p>
  549. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  550. <p>
  551. Eur J Clin Nutr 1999 Feb;53(2):83-7. <strong>Western nutrition and the insulin resistance syndrome: a
  552. link to breast cancer.</strong> Stoll BA. “The incidence of breast cancer in the Western world runs
  553. parallel to that of the major components of the insulin resistance syndrome--hyperinsulinaemia,
  554. dyslipidaemia, hypertension and atherosclerosis. Evidence is reviewed that the growth of breast cancer
  555. is favoured by specific dietary fatty acids, visceral fat accumulation and inadequate physical exercise,
  556. all of which are thought to interact in favouring the development of the insulin resistance syndrome.”
  557. “Experimental evidence suggests that hyperinsulinaemia and its concomitants can increase the promotion
  558. of mammary carcinogenesis and the mechanism is likely to involve increased bioactivity of insulin-like
  559. growth factor 1 (IGF-1). Case-control and cohort studies have shown that higher serum levels of IGF-1
  560. are associated with increased breast cancer risk.” “Nutritional and lifestyle modifications that improve
  561. insulin sensitivity may not only decrease a tendency to atherosclerosis but also reduce breast cancer
  562. risk in women.”
  563. </p>
  564. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  565. <p>
  566. Strong, Leonell C, <strong><em>Biological Aspects of Cancer and Aging,</em></strong> Oxford, Pergamon
  567. Press, 1968.
  568. </p>
  569. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  570. <p>
  571. Ethn Dis 1999 Spring-Summer;9(2):181-9. <strong>Secular trend of earlier onset of menarche with
  572. increasing obesity in black and white girls: the Bogalusa Heart Study.</strong>
  573. <hr />
  574. <strong>in black girls (11.4+/-1.3 vs 12.3+/-1.4 years) and white girls (11.5+/-1.3 vs 12.3+/-1.3
  575. years). Furthermore, twice as many girls in the second cohort had reached menarche by ages younger
  576. than 12 years</strong> (P&lt;0.001).” <strong>“Since increases in body fatness and related early
  577. onset of menarche are risk factors for disorders in adult life including cardiovascular disease and
  578. breast cancer, the secular trend in the increasing incidence of obesity throughout the United States
  579. is becoming a major public health problem.”</strong>
  580. </p>
  581. <p>&nbsp;</p>
  582. </article>
  583. </body>
  584. </html>