The incidence of breast cancer risk was not higher among women working night shift, as previously assessed.
Night shift work has little or no effect on breast cancer incidence. Data from three new studies and from a review of currently available evidence published in theĀ Journal of the National Cancer Institute, indicate the same, despite an assessment in 2007 indicating that night shift work was probably carcinogenic.
‘Women who worked night shifts, including long-term night shifts, were not more likely to develop breast cancer compared to women who did no night shift work at all.’
In its 2007 review, the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer had categorized that shift work which involves disruption of the circadian rhythm, people's internal body clock, are probable carcinogens.This was based on evidence about breast cancer in animal studies. At the time there was only limited evidence about breast cancer risk in humans.
Ruth Travis, DPhil, and colleagues from the Cancer Epidemiology Unit at Oxford University, United Kingdom, followed a total 800,000 women in three large UK studies and estimated the relative risks of breast cancer among women who reported night shift work versus no night shift work.
Overall 522,246 participants in the Million Women Study, 22,559 EPIC-Oxford participants, and 251,045 UK Biobank participants answered questions on shift work and were followed for incident cancer.
No increase in breast cancer risk associated with night shift work, including long-term night shifts, was found in any of these studies.
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Dr. Travis said "We found that women who had worked night shifts, including long-term night shifts, were not more likely to develop breast cancer, either in the 3 new UK studies or when we combined results from all 10 studies that had published relevant data."
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In other words, the incidence of breast cancer was essentially the same whether someone did no night shift work at all or did night shift work for several decades.
Source-Medindia