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Secondhand smoke and breast cancer linked, study says
Wednesday, March 9, 2005 Posted:
10:43 PM EST (0343 GMT)
By John Ritter, USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO — Scientists at an influential
California agency have concluded that secondhand smoke causes breast
cancer, a finding that could have broad impact on cancer research
and lead to even tougher anti-smoking regulations.
Although recent studies have linked smoking to
breast cancer, no major public health group, including the American
Cancer Society, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
the National Cancer Institute, has declared it a cause of the
disease that kills 40,000 women each year in the USA.
The finding by scientists for the Air Resources
Board — whose early efforts to regulate auto emissions were a model
for the rest of the country — could fuel workplace smoking bans in
more states. And it is likely to refocus the scientific debate over
the link between smoking and breast cancer. (Related story:
Firestorm could be brewing)
"I have to say without reservation it will
stimulate continued and accelerated scientific evaluation of the
smoking and breast cancer issue," says Terry Pechacek, associate
director for science in the CDC's office on smoking and health.
A scientific review panel is expected to approve
the report as early as Monday and forward it to the Air Resources
Board, which has broad state authority to regulate air pollution.
The 1,200-page report analyzes new data on the
extent of Californians' exposure to secondhand smoke and more than
1,000 studies of health effects from secondhand smoke.
The conclusion that secondhand smoke causes
breast cancer, particularly in younger women, challenges
conventional scientific thinking because most studies, until
recently, had found no connection between female smokers and breast
cancer.
But California scientists based their conclusion
on recent human studies that they determined had more careful
assessments of long-term exposure to tobacco smoke. The report also
gave more weight to toxicology evidence from animal studies than
previous studies by the surgeon general and others. It's
well-documented that chemicals from cigarettes cause breast cancer
in lab animals.
Overall, women exposed to secondhand smoke have
up to a 90% greater risk of breast cancer, the report says. It says
secondhand smoke kills as many as 73,400 a year in the USA.
The report did not estimate the number of
additional new breast cancer cases annually, and scientists did not
calculate risk levels based on doses of secondhand smoke.
Tobacco companies, in public comments filed with
the board, say the report gives little weight to studies that found
no breast cancer connection.
A new surgeon general's report on secondhand
smoke is expected this year.
"The topic is still under review," says the
report's senior scientific editor, Jonathan Samet, an epidemiology
professor at Johns Hopkins University.
"It's controversial," Samet says. "Concluding
that passive smoke causes breast cancer has potentially powerful
implications for tobacco control and breast cancer control. So there
has been tension over it."
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