Study: Reflux of breast cancer is related to social and economic hardship
A new research has revealed that the risk of breast cancer and the injury of another organ with the disease is greater in people living in areas suffering from social and economic deprivation, in the results published for the first time. According to the research published in the “Lancet” magazine; Breast cancer survivors, after recovery, run the risk of a new cancer, but so far the exact danger has not been clear. The previously published research indicated that women and men who survived breast cancer were at risk of another member-non-breast-infested- by 24% and 27%, compared to the wider population, respectively. There were also suggestions that the risk of a new cancer organs infection by age, at the diagnosis of breast cancer, and to provide more accurate estimates, a team led by researchers at the University of Cambridge the data of more than 580 thousand women and more than 3,500 breast cancer male survivors between 1995 and 2019, using the British Cancer Regiders. The researchers found a significant increase in the risk of cancer in the corresponding breast (not influenced), endometrial cancer and prostate in women and men respectively. Women were one of the backgrounds that is more socially and economically 35% more vulnerable to a new risk of cancer; Compared to females of the least depressed backgrounds, as these differences were mainly driven by other risks other than breast cancer, especially for lung, kidney, head, neck, bladder, esophagus and stomach. Reversal cancer -reversal factors, and this may be because smoking, obesity and alcohol consumption, which are the confirmed risk factors for these cancers, are more common in the most deprived groups. Women listed from breast cancer were more likely to double the risk of breast cancer compared to the general population, as the risk of endometrial cancer was 87%greater, the risk of developing spermic cancer by 58%, and the risk of ovarian cancer by 25%. The life of the diagnosis was also important, as the women diagnosed with breast cancer under the age of 50 were 86% more likely to develop new cancer, compared to the general population of the same age, while women diagnosed after the age of 50 were 17% more likely to develop a new cancer. The study says that one of the possible explanations is that a greater number of younger survivors of breast cancer may have genetic changes that increase the risk of multiple cancers; For example, women who have genetic changes in BRCA1 genes, and BRCA2 is increasingly running the risk of interviewing breast cancer, ovarian cancer and pancreas.