Gray Janet M, Rasanayagam Sharima, Engel Connie, Rizzo Jeanne
Department of Psychology and Program in Science, Technology, and Society, Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY, 12604-0246, USA.
Breast Cancer Prevention Partners, 1388 Sutter St., Suite 400, San Francisco, CA, 94109-5400, USA.
Environ Health. 2017 Sep 2;16(1):94. doi: 10.1186/s12940-017-0287-4.
In this review, we examine the continually expanding and increasingly compelling data linking radiation and various chemicals in our environment to the current high incidence of breast cancer. Singly and in combination, these toxicants may have contributed significantly to the increasing rates of breast cancer observed over the past several decades. Exposures early in development from gestation through adolescence and early adulthood are particularly of concern as they re-shape the program of genetic, epigenetic and physiological processes in the developing mammary system, leading to an increased risk for developing breast cancer. In the 8 years since we last published a comprehensive review of the relevant literature, hundreds of new papers have appeared supporting this link, and in this update, the evidence on this topic is more extensive and of better quality than that previously available.
Increasing evidence from epidemiological studies, as well as a better understanding of mechanisms linking toxicants with development of breast cancer, all reinforce the conclusion that exposures to these substances - many of which are found in common, everyday products and byproducts - may lead to increased risk of developing breast cancer. Moving forward, attention to methodological limitations, especially in relevant epidemiological and animal models, will need to be addressed to allow clearer and more direct connections to be evaluated.
在本综述中,我们研究了环境中辐射和各种化学物质与当前乳腺癌高发病率之间不断扩大且日益引人关注的数据联系。这些有毒物质单独或共同作用,可能在很大程度上导致了过去几十年中观察到的乳腺癌发病率上升。从孕期到青春期及成年早期的发育早期暴露尤其令人担忧,因为它们会重塑发育中的乳腺系统的基因、表观遗传和生理过程程序,从而增加患乳腺癌的风险。自我们上次发表有关相关文献的全面综述以来的8年里,出现了数百篇支持这种联系的新论文,在本次更新中,关于这一主题的证据比以前更广泛且质量更高。
流行病学研究的证据不断增加,以及对有毒物质与乳腺癌发生之间联系机制的更好理解,都强化了这样一个结论,即接触这些物质——其中许多存在于常见的日常产品和副产品中——可能会增加患乳腺癌的风险。展望未来,需要关注方法学上的局限性,尤其是在相关的流行病学和动物模型中,以便能够评估更清晰、更直接的联系。