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Question: Does breastfeeding prevent cancer??
Sorry, but no. By most accounts, breastfeeding brings a host of benefits to both mother and child. Unfortunately, breast cancer prevention has not been shown to be one of them.
What may be causing the confusion: Danish research presented to the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program in Washington, D.C. in June 2000 suggests that having several children, and having them at an early age, may reduce the risk of getting breast cancer later in life. Earlier studies, including one reported in the June 1995 issue of the journal Cancer Research, have found that women who give birth for the first time after age 35 or women who don't bear children at all have a higher risk of breast cancer than the general population. But at present there's no data to suggest that breastfeeding has anything to do with these disparities.
However, breastfeeding may reduce the risk of ovarian cancer. A study published in the July 1997 issue of Journal of the National Cancer Institute has shown that fewer ovulatory cycles may be associated with a decreased risk for this form of cancer. Breastfeeding temporarily prevents ovulation, so nursing does produce some benefit in that realm.
What has been shown to help in the battle to prevent breast cancer: low body fat, regular exercise, and limited alcohol intake. And, as always, regular breast self-exams are an important tool for catching breast cancer at an early stage. Be sure to continue to do monthly breast self-exams during pregnancy and breastfeeding, because 3% of breast cancers are diagnosed in pregnant or nursing women.
When a woman isn't menstruating (during and right after pregnancy or after menopause or a hysterectomy), I recommend that she perform a breast self-exam each month on the day of her birth, as that's usually easy to remember. (People born on the 31st might want to choose a different date.) When you're nursing, try to perform your monthly self-exams soon after a feeding, when your breasts are most empty. Babies often eat more at some feedings than others, so examine yourself after one of the more hearty feedings.
Women who breastfeed often find that their breast tissue is softer and easier to examine after nursing. One additional advantage of nursing, with respect to breast health, is that women often feel much more familiar with their own breast tissue and become more comfortable manipulating their own breasts in subsequent years. Many patients have told me they have become more adept at doing self-exams after they have had a child whom they breastfed.
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