Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

How Alcohol Ups Breast Cancer Risk

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2016 12:35 PM
    Drinking alcohol can put you at increased risk of breast cancer by enhancing the levels of a cancer-causing gene, new research has found.
     
    "Our research shows alcohol enhances the actions of estrogen in driving the growth of breast cancer cells and diminishes the effects of the cancer drug Tamoxifen on blocking estrogen by increasing the levels of a cancer-causing gene called BRAF," said one of the researchers Chin-Yo Lin, assistant professor at University of Houston in the US.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal PLOS ONE.
     
     
    The study objective was to determine how alcohol can affect the actions of estrogen in breast cancer cells. 
     
    They found that alcohol inappropriately promotes sustained expression of BRAF, even in the absence of estrogen, thereby mimicking or enhancing the effects of estrogen in increasing the risk of breast cancer. 
     
    Higher level of the female sex hormone estrogen is associated with greater breast cancer risk.
     
    Another key finding was that alcohol weakened Tamoxifen's ability to suppress the rapid growth of cancer cells. 
     
    The findings suggest that exposure to alcohol may affect a number of cancer-related pathways and mechanisms. 
     
    "We hope these and future findings will provide information and motivation to promote healthy behavioural choices, as well as potential targets for chemoprevention strategies to ultimately decrease breast cancer incidents and deaths within the next decade," Lin said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Then And Now: Top Conservative Aides And What They Said About The Duffy Affair

    Then And Now: Top Conservative Aides And What They Said About The Duffy Affair
    Top Conservative aides have made statements over the course of the scandal around Sen. Mike Duffy's expenses that have been later contradicted, or substantially changed. Here are a few examples.

    Then And Now: Top Conservative Aides And What They Said About The Duffy Affair

    Quebec Bar Owners Threaten To Sue Over Bill That Would Ban Smoking On Patios

    Quebec Bar Owners Threaten To Sue Over Bill That Would Ban Smoking On Patios
     The head of a group of bar owners has threatened to take legal action if Quebec goes ahead with legislation to ban smoking on outdoor patios.

    Quebec Bar Owners Threaten To Sue Over Bill That Would Ban Smoking On Patios

    Alberta Family's Camping Trip Turns Tragic As 12-Year-Old Girl Drowns In B.C.'s Osoyoos Lake

    Alberta Family's Camping Trip Turns Tragic As 12-Year-Old Girl Drowns In B.C.'s Osoyoos Lake
    Police say a 12-year-old Calgary girl drowned in a British Columbia lake while walking in shallow water.

    Alberta Family's Camping Trip Turns Tragic As 12-Year-Old Girl Drowns In B.C.'s Osoyoos Lake

    CBC Sued In US Over For Using YouTube Video Of Buffalo Snowstorm Without Owner's Permission

    CBC Sued In US Over For Using YouTube Video Of Buffalo Snowstorm Without Owner's Permission
    CNN is also named in the suit which claims CBC obtained the video — called Buffalo Lake Effect — from that organization.

    CBC Sued In US Over For Using YouTube Video Of Buffalo Snowstorm Without Owner's Permission

    Lucila Munaretto, Argentinian Ballerina, In Coma After Roller-Skating Accident In Vancouver

    Lucila Munaretto, Argentinian Ballerina, In Coma After Roller-Skating Accident In Vancouver
    RCMP say Lucila Munaretto, 21, missed a stop sign and struck a vehicle on Thursday while roller-skating on a road in North Vancouver.

    Lucila Munaretto, Argentinian Ballerina, In Coma After Roller-Skating Accident In Vancouver

    National Securities Regulator Won't Pressure Provinces To Get Onboard: Chairman

    National Securities Regulator Won't Pressure Provinces To Get Onboard: Chairman
    As the plan to create a national securities regulator forges ahead, the organization's newly minted chairman says he isn't bothered by the fact that not all of the provinces have signed on.

    National Securities Regulator Won't Pressure Provinces To Get Onboard: Chairman