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A Review of Modifiable Risk Factors in Young Women for the Prevention of Breast Cancer

A Review of Modifiable Risk Factors in Young Women for the Prevention of Breast Cancer
A Review of Modifiable Risk Factors in Young Women for the Prevention of Breast Cancer

Breast cancer is the most common cancer diagnosis in women aged less than 40 years and the second most common cause of cancer death in this age group. Global rates of young onset breast cancer have risen steadily over the last twenty years. Although young women with breast cancer have a higher frequency of underlying pathogenic mutations in high penetrance breast cancer susceptibility genes (CSG) than older women, the vast majority of young breast cancer patients are not found to have a germline CSG mutation. There is therefore a need to inform young women regarding non-genetic breast cancer risk factors which have the potential to be influenced by changes in individual behaviour. A Pubmed search was performed using the search terms "young" or "early onset", and "breast cancer" and "modifiable risk". Titles and abstracts from peer-reviewed publications were screened for relevance. This review presents evidence for potentially modifiable risk factors of breast cancer risk in young women, including lifestyle factors (physical activity, body habitus, alcohol use, smoking, shift work and socioeconomic factors), reproductive and hormonal factors and iatrogenic risks. The extent to which these factors are truly modifiable is discussed and interactions between genetic and non-genetic risk factors are also addressed. Health care professionals have an opportunity to inform young women about breast health and risk when presenting at a "teachable moment", including the benefits of physical activity and alcohol habits as risk factor. More focussed discussions regarding individual personal risk and benefit should accompany conversations regarding reproductive health and take into consideration both non-modifiable and iatrogenic BC risk factors.

1179-1314
241-257
Daly, Alex A
9485fff7-d657-427f-bd10-eafdf354fbb7
Rolph, Rachel
d7d0ffbb-79d4-45fa-a773-a53be757f56d
Cutress, Ramsey I
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
Copson, Ellen R
a94cdbd6-f6e2-429d-a7c0-462c7da0e92b
Daly, Alex A
9485fff7-d657-427f-bd10-eafdf354fbb7
Rolph, Rachel
d7d0ffbb-79d4-45fa-a773-a53be757f56d
Cutress, Ramsey I
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
Copson, Ellen R
a94cdbd6-f6e2-429d-a7c0-462c7da0e92b

Daly, Alex A, Rolph, Rachel, Cutress, Ramsey I and Copson, Ellen R (2021) A Review of Modifiable Risk Factors in Young Women for the Prevention of Breast Cancer. Breast Cancer, 13, 241-257. (doi:10.2147/BCTT.S268401).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most common cancer diagnosis in women aged less than 40 years and the second most common cause of cancer death in this age group. Global rates of young onset breast cancer have risen steadily over the last twenty years. Although young women with breast cancer have a higher frequency of underlying pathogenic mutations in high penetrance breast cancer susceptibility genes (CSG) than older women, the vast majority of young breast cancer patients are not found to have a germline CSG mutation. There is therefore a need to inform young women regarding non-genetic breast cancer risk factors which have the potential to be influenced by changes in individual behaviour. A Pubmed search was performed using the search terms "young" or "early onset", and "breast cancer" and "modifiable risk". Titles and abstracts from peer-reviewed publications were screened for relevance. This review presents evidence for potentially modifiable risk factors of breast cancer risk in young women, including lifestyle factors (physical activity, body habitus, alcohol use, smoking, shift work and socioeconomic factors), reproductive and hormonal factors and iatrogenic risks. The extent to which these factors are truly modifiable is discussed and interactions between genetic and non-genetic risk factors are also addressed. Health care professionals have an opportunity to inform young women about breast health and risk when presenting at a "teachable moment", including the benefits of physical activity and alcohol habits as risk factor. More focussed discussions regarding individual personal risk and benefit should accompany conversations regarding reproductive health and take into consideration both non-modifiable and iatrogenic BC risk factors.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 February 2021
Published date: 13 April 2021
Additional Information: © 2021 Daly et al.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473646
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473646
ISSN: 1179-1314
PURE UUID: 2f95f72f-0f41-4d91-9542-f653b9d77a84

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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2023 17:40
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 23:45

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Contributors

Author: Alex A Daly
Author: Rachel Rolph
Author: Ellen R Copson

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