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Ovarian
cancer risk not affected by alcohol and
smoking, but reduced by caffeine
A new study has found that
cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption do
not have an effect on ovarian cancer risk,
while caffeine intake may lower the risk,
particularly in women not using hormones.
The study is published in the
March 1, 2008 issue of CANCER, a
peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer
Society.
Various studies have assessed
the potential link between modifiable
factors such as smoking or caffeine and
alcohol intake and have generated
conflicting results.
To help clarify these
associations, Dr. Shelley S. Tworoger, of
Harvard Medical School and the Harvard
School of Public Health, and colleagues
examined ongoing questionnaire data from the
Brigham and Women’s Hospital-based Nurses’
Health Study, which includes 121,701 US
female registered nurses.
The Nurses’ Health Study
cohort was established in 1976, when women
aged 30-35 completed and returned initial
questionnaires.
Every two years,
questionnaires are sent to the women to
update exposure variables and document newly
diagnosed diseases.
Dr. Tworoger and her
co-investigators prospectively examined
associations between smoking and ovarian
cancer risk among 110,454 women and between
alcohol or caffeine and ovarian cancer risk
among 80,253 women, all followed between
June 1, 1976 and June 1, 2004.
For the smoking analyses,
they identified 737 confirmed cases of
epithelial ovarian cancer, and for the
dietary analyses, they identified 507 cases.
There was no association
between current or past smoking and ovarian
cancer risk, however smoking status,
duration, and pack-years were significantly
associated with risk of mucinous tumors, a
rare form of ovarian cancer.
The authors also found no
association between alcohol consumption and
ovarian cancer risk. However they observed
an inverse trend of risk with total caffeine
and caffeinated coffee intake, but no
association with decaffeinated coffee.
The potential reduction in
risk with higher caffeine intake appeared to
be strongest for women who had never used
oral contraceptives or postmenopausal
hormones.
The authors concluded that
“reducing alcohol intake and cessation of
smoking is not likely to have a substantial
impact on risk of ovarian cancer.”
They add that “the
possibility that caffeine may reduce ovarian
cancer risk, particularly for women who have
not previously used exogenous hormones, is
intriguing and warrants further study,
including an evaluation of possible
biological mechanisms.”
Article: “Caffeine, Alcohol,
Smoking, and the Risk of Incident Epithelial
Ovarian Cancer,” Shelley S. Tworoger, Dorota
M. Gertig, Margaret A. Gates, Jonathan L.
Hecht, and Susan E. Hankinson. CANCER;
Published Online: January 22, 2008 (DOI:
10.1002/cncr.23275); Print Issue Date: March
1, 2008.