Burning
questions
(continued)
In her first
project on the subject - a case control study funded by the American
Cancer Society and UC Davis - Murin compared 87 women with invasive
breast cancer that had spread to the lungs (the "case"
group) with 174 women with breast cancer that had not metastasized
(the "control" group). Each was matched up by year of
diagnosis, age at diagnosis, size of primary tumor and whether cancer
was found in the lymph nodes.
In research
that is pending publication, Murin and John Iniardi, a UC Davis
Medical Center statistician, found that women who smoked were twice
as likely as nonsmokers to have breast cancer that metastasized
to the lungs.
For her next
project, Murin will collaborate with the Harvard School of Public
Health and use data from the Nurses' Health Study to see what role
smoking plays in breast cancer mortality.
The Nurses'
Health Study is one of the longest, largest and most detailed health
surveys in existence in the United States. It was first initiated
at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston
in 1976, when 121,700 women registered nurses from 11 states completed
detailed questionnaires about known and suspected risk factors for
cancer and cardiovascular disease, including smoking. Every two
years participants submit follow-up surveys. Of this group, some
5,373 have been diagnosed with breast cancer.
Information
culled from the Nurses' Health Study has proven enormously valuable
to health researchers. This study was one of the first to show no
relationship between smoking and an increased risk of breast cancer.
It also revealed a surprising lack of connection between a low-fat
diet and a reduced risk of breast cancer. This year, numbers crunched
from the database failed to show a connection between a high-fiber
diet and prevention of colon cancer.
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