Categories · Health/Science
· Secondhand Smoke
· Breast Cancer
non-USA, by Country · Canada
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Expert Panel on Tobacco Smoke and Breast Cancer Risk releases report Jump to full article: Ontario Tobacco Research Unit (ca), 2009-04-23
Intro: There is now enough scientific evidence to link both active smoking
and second-hand smoke to breast cancer, according to an international panel convened by
the Ontario Tobacco Research Unit, an affiliate of the Dalla Lana School of Public
Health, University of Toronto, with support from the Public Health Agency of Canada.
“Until recently, evidence about the link between breast cancer and tobacco smoke,
although voluminous, was inconclusive. But the Panel’s careful analysis of all available
evidence, particularly recent evidence, led us to conclude that there is persuasive
evidence of risk,” said Neil Collishaw, Chair of the Panel. “An estimated 80 to 90 per
cent of women have been exposed to tobacco smoke in adolescence and adulthood. Those
women face an increased risk of breast cancer because of that exposure.”
There have been many studies over the years on the relationship between cigarette smoke
and breast cancer in women. The Panel comprehensively reviewed all available evidence,
including important recent evidence, and concluded there was a risk even non-smoking
young women face through passive exposure to cigarette smoke. The Panel also
concluded that the relationship of active smoking to both pre- and post-menopausal breast
cancer is consistent with causality, but there is not yet enough evidence to draw a
conclusion about the nature of the relationship between exposure to second-hand smoke
and breast cancer for older, post-menopausal women.
“It is important from a public health perspective to get the message out to the public
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