For women who suffer from migraines, here's some good news: New study shows that your risk of breast cancer may be reduced by as much as 26 percent.
Women with migraine troubles have a breast cancer risk that's lower than the general population by a whole 26 percent!
And no matter what a woman's age or what migraine triggers a woman might be avoiding, the risk of breast cancer is still reduced, according to the study, led by Christopher I. Li, M.D., Ph.D., a breast-cancer epidemiologist and associate member of the Hutchinson Center's Public Health Sciences Division.Li led the first-of-its-kind study linking migraines with breast cancer risk reduction that was published last November.
This time researchers found that the risk reduction remained statistically similar regardless of a woman's menopausal status, her age at migraine diagnosis, use of prescription migraine medications or whether she avoided known migraine "triggers" such as alcohol consumption, smoking and taking hormone replacements. These triggers are also well-established breast cancer risk factors.
Some key differences between this study and the initial one that discovered the link include: the sample size was more than four times larger this time - more than 4,500 cases and controls versus about 1,000 each in the first study - and was more diverse geographically, drawing women from five metropolitan areas instead of only one.
"From an epidemiological perspective, having a larger and more diverse study in its underlying population helps in replicating the finding," Li said.
The age range of women studied was wider this time, 34-64 years of age versus 55-74 years old.
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Researchers were able to ascertain whether women in the study had lifestyle behaviours that are known migraine triggers - alcohol consumption, smoking and taking hormone replacement therapy.
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"But in this study we looked at women who never drank, never smoked and who also didn't use hormones and found the same association within each of those groups, suggesting that the association between migraine and reduced breast cancer risk may be independent of those other factors and may stand alone as a protective factor," he said.
What remains unknown is how migraine confers its apparent protection against breast cancer.
"We know that migraine is definitely related to hormones and that's why we started looking at this in the first place. We have different ideas about what may be going on but it's unclear exactly what the biological mechanisms are," Li said.
The study appears in the July 2009 issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.
Source-ANI
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