More

Smoking Ups Breast Cancer Risk For Normal And Overweight Women

Smoker Breast Cancer

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE   04/ 3/11 04:00 PM ET   AP

-- Smoking raises the risk of breast cancer for healthy-weight and overweight women but not for those who are obese, new research suggests.

It's a first-of-its-kind finding, and even if other studies confirm it, it doesn't mean that smoking is safe for women who weigh way too much, researchers say.

"Smoking is a strong risk factor for many other diseases other than breast cancer," including lung cancer and heart disease, said Juhua Luo, a West Virginia University scientist.

She led the study and presented results Sunday at a meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in Orlando, Fla.

Obesity has long been recognized as a risk factor for breast cancer, but research tying smoking to breast cancer is much weaker. In March, Luo published results of a study that found a 16 percent higher risk of breast cancer among postmenopausal women who smoke or used to smoke versus those who never did.

The 76,628 women were in a government-funded, decades-long study called the Women's Health Initiative, and 3,378 breast cancer cases occurred.

Luo's new study looks closer at these same women according to body mass index, a measure of height and weight.

Those who were healthy-weight or merely overweight, with BMIs under 30, were more likely to develop breast cancer if they smoked; the risk was 16 percent higher for those smoking for 10 to 29 years and 25 percent higher for those who smoked 30 to 49 years.

However, researchers saw no added breast cancer risk in obese smokers (BMI of 30 or above) compared to nonsmokers who weighed that much.

"That needs to be interpreted cautiously because it's the first time that anyone's examined whether the relationship of smoking with breast cancer is different by level of obesity," said Susan Gapstur, vice president of epidemiology at the American Cancer Society. "Other studies would need to confirm this relationship."

Researchers had no explanation for the results. Many breast cancers are fueled by estrogen, and fat tissue makes that hormone. So it could be that obesity is contributing so much risk already that a smaller risk from smoking is less apparent in these women.

But there's no way to tell that from this research. "We cannot separate the effect of smoking from the effect of obesity," Luo said.

It also could be that obese women died of other smoking-related problems such as heart disease before they even had a chance to develop breast cancer. In that case, they would not have even been counted in a study like this, she said.

The frustrating bottom line: More research is needed.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST HEALTH

-- Smoking raises the risk of breast cancer for healthy-weight and overweight women but not for those who are obese, new research suggests. It's a first-of-its-kind finding, and even if other studie...
-- Smoking raises the risk of breast cancer for healthy-weight and overweight women but not for those who are obese, new research suggests. It's a first-of-its-kind finding, and even if other studie...
Filed by Nicholas Miriello  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 92
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
photo
OutAtFirst
Believe it! You don't know how to text and drive
03:49 PM on 04/05/2011
That's because the obese die from a heart attack before the breast cancer gets a good hold.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:23 PM on 04/05/2011
What a question! depressing.

: /
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PJsThreeDogLife
"A large lady given to speaking her mind."
09:24 AM on 04/05/2011
I'm no expert but it seems like a ridiculous study to me. If the cancer don't get you then the heart attack will. How is that news?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VJSleight
Tobacco Treatment Specialist
04:53 PM on 04/08/2011
Breast cancer is not just one disease but presents itself in many different forms. As we learn more about how different sub-sets of women are affected, we can develop different treatments that target specific sub-sets of women, instead of treating all breast cancers the same. This research points out something we didn't know before and leads us to ask an important question--what mechanism is protecting these obese smokers? Could it be developed to protect other women. We still don't know the cause of breast cancer and this study is just giving us another piece of the puzzle.
jokerdanny
my other bio is a macro
09:06 AM on 04/05/2011
that's why i encourage everyone to smoke donuts
07:34 AM on 04/05/2011
Not even sure why that would be something worth researching any further. So you find out that smoking does not increase breast cancer risk in obese women: does that mean obese women should be able to smoke? Of course not. Does it mean you would not screen obese women who smoke for breast cancer? Of course not. So the finding has little clinical relevance, and additional research would be a waste of money.
photo
stape45
Spin this!
05:44 AM on 04/05/2011
Smoking and obesity act as a tag team in a handicap match against the heart.
04:46 AM on 04/05/2011
Of course it is. The chance you'll die from smoking is diminished by the chance you'll die from weight related causes.
barbra1971
Sherry Hunt my hero
03:49 AM on 04/05/2011
How about the age of this women and their health status by the end of study? Maybe it will explain more.
Sandmanj
Tread gently. Mother nature is pregnant.
03:35 AM on 04/05/2011
Beyond a bunch of numbers in a single study, which are pretty meaningless, women who are obese should know that their fat cells aren't going to prevent emphysema or lung cancer if they smoke.
photo
trafalgar50
discerning peace warrior
03:18 AM on 04/05/2011
For someone who smokes and doesn't want to quit, this may be the perfect reason to gain wait also.
12:32 AM on 04/05/2011
Could it be because obese women are more likely to die from other causes before smoking has the chance to lead to cancer? Heart disease still kills more women than smoking-related cancers do, and obese women are much more likely than normal weight women to suffer from cardiovascular and metabolic complications, like high blood pressure, diabetes/metabolic syndrome, artertial hardening, and others.
12:29 AM on 04/05/2011
Well that was much to do about nothing...

It may...may not...we don't know because the obese women may have died of other complications of obesity...we need more studies... Ugh ! lets throw more tax dollars at it for a few more decades.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kyeshinka
11:59 PM on 04/04/2011
If it makes you thinner, then by all means, keep smoking. Both obesity and smoking are a drag on our national health care system, but at least as a smoker, you look better and I don't have to dodge you when you race down the aisle in your Medicare scooter, filling your cart with more frozen pizzas and ice cream bars. Smokers are better than fatties anyday.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eve mahar
12:11 AM on 04/05/2011
what a horrible person you are.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deluk
hot mess...
03:51 AM on 04/05/2011
honest is "horrible"?  What sort of twisted society do we live in where honest is horrible?
tamazul
Badges? What Badges?
11:33 PM on 04/04/2011
Like the Chevy Corvair being "unsafe at any speed," tobacco is unsfe at any weight.
11:23 PM on 04/04/2011
Even if this were true second hand smokers would still be equally affected.