Health & Medical Cancer & Oncology

Light Drinking Over Time May Raise Breast Cancer Risk

Light Drinking Over Time May Raise Breast Cancer Risk

Light Drinking Over Time May Raise Breast Cancer Risk


Routinely Drinking as Little as Three Drinks a Week Can Raise Breast Cancer Risk, Study Finds

Nov. 1, 2011 -- Some studies have linked drinking alcohol to an increased risk for breast cancer, and now new research suggests that even moderate to light alcohol intake may raise a woman’s risk.

Consistently drinking as little as three alcoholic beverages a week was associated with a small -- 15% -- increase in breast cancer risk in the study.

Drinking at least two glasses of wine or beer a day or two cocktails a day -- was associated with about a 50% increase in risk.

The study, which appears in the Nov. 3 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association, ultimately found cumulative lifetime alcohol exposure to be an important predictor of breast cancer risk.


Slideshow: A Visual Guide to Breast Cancer

Binge Drinking and Breast Cancer


The study included nearly 106,000 nurses enrolled in one of the largest, longest, and most comprehensive women’s health studies ever conducted in the U.S.

Between 1980 and 2008, the women were surveyed about their drinking habits eight separate times, allowing the researchers to evaluate the role of drinking patterns on breast cancer risk.

The women were between the ages of 34 and 59 when first asked about their alcohol intake in 1980. The women were asked about alcohol intake during early adulthood -- ages 18 to 22, 25 to 30, and 35 to 40.

Binge drinking was associated with an increase in breastcancer risk, as was cumulative alcohol intake over time.

But frequency of drinking -- how often women drank during the week and when -- did not appear to influence risk. The key component was how much you consistently drank over time.

"There is both good and bad news for women in our findings," researcher Wendy Y. Chen, MD, MPH, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, tells WebMD.

"It appears that by changing their drinking behavior, women can impact their risk for breastcancer, no matter when in life they do this. That is the good news. The bad news is you can’t really change what you did in the past."

ACS: No More than One Drink a Day


The American Cancer Society (ACS) recommends that women who choose to drink alcohol limit their intake to no more than one drink per day.

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