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Ladies, take note! Consuming 7 or more alcoholic beverages per week increases breast cancer risk

Previous studies have already established alcohol as a risk factor for breast cancer, however, most of those studies have been conducted in predominantly white populations.

Ladies, take note! Consuming 7 or more alcoholic beverages per week increases breast cancer risk

New Delhi: Ladies! You may have to monitor your alcohol consumption if you want to avoid your risk of breast cancer.

A study has found an association between alcohol and breast cancer, saying that, women who drink seven or more drinks per week showed an increased risk of breast cancer.

The findings showed that that women who drank 14 or more alcoholic beverages per week were 33% more likely to develop breast cancer than women who consumed four or fewer drinks per week.

Previous studies have already established alcohol as a risk factor for breast cancer, however, most of those studies have been conducted in predominantly white populations.

Researchers from the University of North Carolina in the US wanted to discern whether alcohol raises risk for African-American women by assessing participants in a large study that solely enrolled African-American women.

The team enrolled 22,338 women from the African American Breast Cancer Epidemiology and Risk (AMBER) Consortium, which encompasses four large epidemiologic studies of breast cancer. The participants reported their alcohol intake via a questionnaire.

Researcher of the study Melissa A Troester said, black women drink less alcohol than white women, with previous research suggesting a range of reasons from religious restrictions to health restrictions. Troester further said a limitation of the study is that it included relatively few women who drank heavily, making those findings less statistically significant.

However, she said this study's results are consistent with previous research indicating increased risk for the highest levels of alcohol consumption.

The study appeared in journal of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.

(With ANI inputs)