Watch: Can birth control pills protect women from cancer?
Hormonal birth control linked to increased breast cancer risk, study says
Women using hormonal birth control methods -- from the pill, to the ring
and implants -- appeared to have a 20 percent higher risk of breast
cancer, according to a new study of 1.8 million women in Denmark.
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The study, which was published in the New England Journal of Medicine,
included 1.8 million women over the course of nearly 11 years. Denmark
has a nationwide registry, which enabled scientists to find data on the
women.
The researchers addressed potential confounding factors that, on their
own, could increase breast cancer risk such as smoking, family history,
prior pregnancies, body-mass index and education, as a marker for
socioeconomic status.
"I was hoping that I was able to recommend one product that was
risk-free but could not recommend any product as risk-free," study
co-author Dr. Lina Mørch told ABC News today.
According to the study, a statistically significant increase in breast
cancer risk was found in women who had used hormonal contraception for
at least a year. And, the breast cancer risk seemed to increase with the
duration of hormonal contraceptive use.
Mørch said that the increase in risk persisted even after stopping if
hormonal contraceptives had previously been used for at least five
years. But this was not the case among short-term users. Mørch described
"short-term users" as less than five years.
The data in the study backed up previous research linking oral
contraceptive use with increased breast cancer risk. However, the
increases in breast cancer risk seen in the study were relatively small
and the absolute increases in breast cancer risk remained low.
Study authors said the risk of breast cancer should be balanced against the benefits of the use of hormonal contraceptives.
In previous studies, the use of oral contraceptives has been linked to
lower risks of other types of cancer. Mørch said women using or
considering the use of oral contraceptives should talk with their
medical providers.
Mia Gaudet, Ph.D., of the American Cancer Society, told ABC News today:
“Women who are using oral contraceptives might want to speak to their
doctors about use before age 35 and after age 35. Depending on their
reasons for using oral contraceptives, they might want to consider other
options, including non-hormonal contraceptives.”
“Beyond their role as effective contraception, oral contraceptives are
used to treat a variety of abnormal menstrual syndromes and have a net
cancer benefit as they reduce the risk of ovarian, endometrial, and
colorectal cancers,” Gaudet said.
“It's not black and white. There are a lot of things to take into account," Mørch said.
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