Stress and traumatic events such as bereavement and divorce have been
ruled out as causes of breast cancer, according to new research.
There is a common belief that stress can cause cancer, but the finding from scientists at the Institute of Cancer Research
carries weight because it is from a very large study which began in
2003 and followed what happened to more than 100,000 healthy women over
40 years.
All the women involved were asked how often they had experienced
stress and whether they had gone through any of eight different
stressful events over the previous five years. A third (34%) said they
had been stressed and 74% had experienced at least one stressful event
such as a death in the family.
But the 1,783 of the 106,612 women who later developed breast cancer
had not suffered significantly more stress or traumatic life events than
those who remained cancer-free.
Delyth Morgan, chief executive at Breast Cancer Now
which is funding the ongoing study, said: “Many women often question
whether their breast cancer could have been triggered by stress or a
particularly difficult experience. This groundbreaking study provides
the most robust evidence to date that stress itself is unlikely to be a
biological cause of the disease.
“As the Breast Cancer Now Generations study continues to uncover
more about the underlying causes of the disease, we need to turn this
into practical guidance to help women reduce their risk.”
The study coincides with a survey from a second cancer charity which
says that women with incurable secondary breast cancer are being failed
by the health service because they not being diagnosed and treated
promptly. Secondary breast cancer occurs when cancer cells spread from
the breast to other parts of the body and it is incurable. Breast Cancer
Care says thousands of women are not getting the care they need in
time.
Nearly a tenth of the women surveyed said they had been diagnosed
because they arrived in a hospital A&E department with debilitating
cancer symptoms. Their disease was not picked up in a breast clinic and
they were given their diagnosis by emergency care staff, without the
support available in a breast cancer unit.
A fifth of those surveyed said they did not see a hospital doctor for
eight weeks or more after they first told their GP they thought
something was wrong.
“Today’s report
paints an extremely worrying picture. Our findings uncover the true
extent of inadequate care for people with incurable breast cancer – from
feeling they’re not taken seriously when they raise concerns, to facing
avoidable delays to a diagnosis, or being told the news in A&E.
This is absolutely unacceptable,” said Samia al Qadhi, chief executive
of Breast Cancer Care.
“Prompt diagnosis is crucial to help control severe symptoms and
allow people with incurable breast cancer to make every day count – as a
mum or grandmother, at work, and when making memories with friends.
Yet, for so many this is not happening.”
Emma Cairns, 43 from Wokingham, who has one child, was diagnosed with
secondary breast cancer in 2011. “I started getting really bad backache
about four years after my primary breast cancer,” she told the charity.
“Tests at my GP came back OK and I was told to get on with things. But
the pain continued to get worse. After going back and forth and even
with three months of physiotherapy, it wasn’t any better. I still didn’t
get an MRI scan.
“A year and a half later I could barely walk. Finally an MRI was
arranged and I was still reassured it was probably nothing. Then, after
the scan I was told I had incurable breast cancer. Not only that, I had
three collapsed vertebrae and the cancer was in my pelvis and liver. I
was distraught.
“I’d been made to feel I was making a fuss about nothing and now I
was facing my worst nightmare. Living in excruciating pain with poor
mobility had put my life on hold, including being a mum – and an early
diagnosis could have got things under control so much quicker.”
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