IWU-Off the Beaten Path AND Safer Path
Hope: Lighting the Pathways to Prevention of Breast Cancer
By Laurine Brown PhD
“You
don’t wait till people get cancer. You try to help them not get
cancer.” My six year old offers
simple wisdom seemingly beyond her years. I wish the pink breast cancer
awareness pamphlets distributed by our cancer leaders honored such common
sense. But they begin narrating only with diagnosis, cheerfully reassuring me
that “early detection is my best protection”.
I am not reassured. I have walked the afterlife of detection, complete with
it’s fear, surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. I want to prevent my own
daughter’s breast cancer (or at least help her minimize risks) not wait
till she has cancer and then catch it early. Where is the public guidance?
Some statistics offer me hope. A Scandinavian study of
44,788 twins tells me that environmental factors play a much greater role than
inherited genetics in susceptibility to most types of cancer. Consistent with
this, we know only 5-10% of women with
breast cancer inherit altered genes. Adding risks, like reproductive and family
history, we account for less than 40% of this epidemic. And what of the majority of women with no
“known” risk factors for breast cancer? If carcinogenic or
hormone-disrupting chemicals, and ionizing radiation don’t contribute, physician Janette Sherman challenges in
“Life’s Delicate Balance”, what explains breast
cancer’s doubling (not
attributable to mammography), since 1940, increasing in tandem with prostate
and childhood cancers?
Scientists know our bodies contain remnants of modern life: vinyl siding,
plastic wrap, weedkillers. Tissue tests
reveal 200-500 synthetic foreigners. We’re ignorant of how
these unnatural materials interact in our cellular symphony. But strong animal
and some human evidence suggests we should be very concerned.
So, if exposures are a problem, then eliminating
exposures offers a solution. A light
illuminates a pathway to prevention. I cannot change my daughter’s or my genes, sex, or age.
But I can do something about our
exposures.
Yet public breast cancer guidance misses this opportunity to help me and others
reduce our risks. Occasionally we are warned about harmful and helpful personal
habits, like smoking, drinking and eating. But I find not a single caution
about radiation (a proven cause of cancer) or any of the 80,000 post World War
II synthetic chemicals dancing with our biology in the same half century
we’ve seen breast cancer rates rise steadily by 1% per year. (The 1980s
had a steeper rise, then fall, when screening through mammography became more
widespread, then leveled off.) Also absent is any mention of 15,000 chemicals
our Environmental Protection Agency is screening for hormone disruption,
despite the fact hormones (like estrogen) are a prime suspect in breast cancer
risk.
Sadly, the National Cancer Institute allocates a mere 5-10%
budget slice for prevention. It’s no
wonder I’ve come up dry. Most funding goes for better treatment, cures,
genetics. Even in prevention’s meager slice, quick-fix drugs dominate
(like tamoxifen to high risk women), rather than true prevention (including
identifying and eliminating environmental causes). If an ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure, then
we have it backwards.
“And me, mommy. And I going to get breast cancer
too?” my daughter asks. I want to
reassure her that I hope she won’t, and that we will do everything we can
to help her not get cancer. Fortunately I find some visionary groups who are
sifting through the tangle of research on breast cancer and a lifetime of
exposures, ordering these findings into “better safe than sorry” pathways
to prevention. I scan them for do-able actions and there are plenty.
I am hopeful. It is a beginning…
1.
Keep moving and keep young girls moving—Exercising just 4 hours weekly may decrease a
woman’s chances of developing breast cancer by 1/3, perhaps by inhibiting
cancer-promoting forms of estrogen. Additionally, physically active girls have
later menarche, thus fewer years of exposure to menstrual estrogen.
2.
Pass up smoking and alcohol—Active and passive smoking increases breast cancer risk through
an unknown effect on women’s circulating estrogen. Alcohol may account
for 4% of all breast cancers, perhaps by increasing the more potent, harmful
form of estrogen (estradiol).
3.
Eat-drink to be healthy—Choose a plant-based diet,
rich in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, and low in fat (but with
healthy plant oils). Compounds in plant foods like green tea, cruciferous
vegetables like broccoli, flax, soy, shiitake mushrooms, or garlic may boost
immunity and protect against cell damage. Choose organic foods to minimize pesticide exposure. Eating “low
on the food chain” (more plants,
less animals) also minimizes exposure to more highly concentrated chemical and
hormonal residues in the flesh, fat and milk of animals.
Breastfeed your children. Among
other benefits, a traditional pattern of breastfeeding (on-demand, night feeds,
into toddlerhood) decreases a woman’s risk of breast cancer, and that of
her offspring. Studies suggest that a 25% reduction in breast cancer incidence
could be achieved if all women with children lactated for 24+ months.
Filter your water. We must work
to clean up our earth’s water from pollution. In the meantime, take
precautions by identifying contaminants (see your local water report), and
filtering them out.
4.
Beware of bad chemistry—Begin cutting exposures to toxins with some of these actions. Minimize
dry cleaning which uses a probable carcinogen, perc. Avoid pesticides
(insecticides/herbicides) in and outside your home, office, school. Replace
toxic cleaning products with safer ones like baking soda, vinegar, borax.
Ventilate your home and office. Take off your shoes inside to avoid tracking in
outdoor chemicals. Avoid potentially carcinogenic black or dark brown semi- or
permanent hair dyes. Don’t heat food in plastic.
5.
Avoid or minimize non-essential radiation—Reconsider “routine” dental and chiropractic x-rays. If you choose to radiate request lead shield
protection for the chest/pelvis/neck. Ask your doctor about the frequency of mammography for your reproductive age, breast density, and
history that will minimize radiation while still assisting in early detection.
6.
Beware of hormone hype— Be informed on the risks/benefits of hormone therapies. Early (shortly
after menarche) or prolonged use of birth control pills (> 5 years and
before first pregnancy) slightly increases breast cancer risk.
Long term use of hormone replacement therapy increases risk, but this may
decrease after stopping.
7. Keep
your distance from electromagnetic fields and
honor cycles of darkness and light—These
effects cannot yet be ruled out. Keep your distance from clock radios, computers, televisions,
microwaves, refrigerators. Replace electric blankets and electrical appliances.
Additionally, sleep in complete darkness at night to stimulate melatonin (which inhibits estrogen), and get at
least 15 minutes of sunlight daily
to stimulate the immune system.
8.
Join the movement—Speak
out about the need for safe food (including safe breast milk), clean air, clean
water, clean land, and non-toxic products. Talk with your grocers about
carrying local organic foods, your doctor about supporting efforts to replace
mammography with safer, more reliable screening technologies, your school and
workplace and about using integrated pest management. Write to companies who
use PVC plastic and ask them to replace it. Join forces with other local groups
to help minimize pollution of your community’s land, air and water. Tell
your friends and family about what you’ve learned.
Support organizations that work upstream, investing in research into the true
causes of breast cancer and real prevention (beyond early detection and pharmaceutical
“prevention”). Examples are: Breast Cancer Fund, www.breastcancerfund.org; Breast
Cancer Action, www.bcaction.org, and National
Breast Cancer Coalition, www.stopcancer.org. Or ask your local
cancer organizations to earmark your donation for true prevention. It’s
never to late to make a difference—in our own lives and our
daughters’ lives.
See these sources for
additional guidance and references:
1) “Pathways to Prevention: Eight Practical Steps—From the
Personal to the Political—Toward Reducing the Risk of Breast Cancer,” by N Evans and AR Martin, Breast Cancer Fund,
2000; and 2) “Breast Cancer 2000: An Update on Facts, Figures and
Issues,” by JR Reiss and AR
Martin. Complementary copy of each available from www.breastcancerfund, 800/487-0492 (donations welcome); 3)
“Things You Can Do… to reduce your toxic exposures and protect
your health” by L Brown, 2000.
Available for a donation to LIVING upstream 309/454-3169.
NOTICE OF UPCOMING TALK
Dr. Laurine Brown, co-director of LIVING upstream and breast cancer survivor,
will present “Hope: Lighting the Pathways to Prevention of Breast
Cancer” Monday October 29, 2001 at 7pm at Illinois Wesleyan University,
Center for Natural Sciences Room 101. This talk is free and open to the public.
Call IWU Wellness for details 309/556-3334.