A new study has found that women who consume higher amounts of calcium and vitamin D may have a lower risk of developing premenopausal breast cancer.
A new study has found that women who consume higher amounts of calcium and vitamin D may have a lower risk of developing premenopausal breast cancer.
As a part of the study, researchers led by Jennifer Lin, Ph.D., of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, assessed 10,578 premenopausal and 20,909 postmenopausal women age 45 and older who were part of the Women's Health Study.At the beginning of the study (in 1993 or 1995), the women completed a questionnaire about their medical history and lifestyle, plus a food frequency questionnaire that detailed how often they consumed certain foods, beverages and supplements during the previous year.
Every six months during the first year and then every year after that, participants returned follow-up questionnaires indicating whether they had been diagnosed with breast cancer.
The researchers noted that over an average of 10 years of follow-up, 276 premenopausal women and 743 postmenopausal women developed breast cancer.
They also found that taking Calcium and vitamin D was moderately associated with a lower risk of breast cancer before but not after menopause. The inverse associated in premenopausal women appeared more pronounced for more aggressive breast tumours.
"A possible explanation for the evident difference by menopause status may be related to the joint relationship among calcium, vitamin D and insulinlike growth factors (IGFs)," the authors state.
Advertisement
Since blood levels of these compounds decline with age, they would be more prevalent in younger, premenopausal women.
Advertisement
The study appeared in the May 28 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Source: ANI
LIN/m