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Women, who have menopause very earlier due to some medical interventions, are more prone to the development of lung cancer.


Lung Cancer Risk Increases With Non-natural Menopause
Last Updated: 2009-07-24T10:05:54+05:30
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Women having premature menopause are more prone to have lung cancer. This was confirmed in a new study related to cancer and women which has been published in International Journal of Cancer.
 
This shocking link was made by epidemiologists from the Universit de Montral, the Research Centre of the Centre Hospitalier de l’Universit de Montral and the INRSInstitut Armand-Frappier.
 
 
“We found that women who experienced non-natural menopause are at almost twice the risk of developing lung cancer compared to women who experienced natural menopause,” says Anita Koushik, a researcher at the Universit de Montral’s Department of Social and Preventive Medicine and a scientist at the Research Centre of the Centre Hospitalier de l’Universit de Montral. “This increased risk of lung cancer was particularly observed among women who had non-natural menopause by having had both their ovaries surgically removed.”
 
The scientists conducted study on 422 women with lung cancer and 577 control subjects at 18 hospitals across Montreal, Quebec, Canada. They assessed socio-demographic characteristics, residential history, occupational exposures, medical and smoking history, and (among women) menstruation and pregnancy histories.
 
“A major strength of this study was the detailed smoking information which we obtained from all study participants; this is important because of the role of smoking in lung cancer and because smokers generally have lower estrogen levels than non-smokers,” says Dr. Koushik. “Although smoking is the dominant cause of lung cancer, we know other factors can play an important role in enhancing the impact of tobacco carcinogens; this research suggests that in women hormonal factors may play such a role.”
 
Women were considered menopausal if their menstrual periods had stopped naturally, surgically (by hysterectomy with bilateral surgical ovary removal) or because of radiation or chemotherapy. Women who had at least one remaining ovary and who still had their menstrual periods at the time of diagnosis/interview were classified as premenopausal. Among participants with natural menopause, the median age for attaining menopause was 50 years old; among those with non-natural menopause, it was at 43 years.
 
“Non-natural menopause, particularly surgical menopause, may represent an increased risk with younger age at menopause given that surgery is usually done before natural menopause occurs. It’s possible that vulnerability to lung cancer is caused by early and sudden decrease in estrogen levels or potentially long-term use of hormone replacement therapy and further research is needed to explore these hypotheses,” says Jack Siemiatycki a professor at the Universit de Montral’s Department of Social and Preventive Medicine and a scientist at the Research Centre of the Centre Hospitalier de l’Universit de Montral.
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