Higher levels of 'forever chemicals' found in women with breast, skin, and ovarian cancers

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Forever chemical exposure may be linked to a heightened risk of certain cancers. Photography by Eloisa Ramos/Stocksy United
  • In 2020, about 8.8 million women globally had cancer.
  • Researchers continue to investigate potential risk factors for a woman developing cancer, including exposure to “forever chemicals.”
  • Researchers recently discovered that women who developed breast, ovarian, skin, and uterine cancers had significantly higher levels of these types of chemicals in their bodies.

Of the 8.8 million women who had cancer worldwide in 2020, 2.3 million women were diagnosed with breast cancer, making it the most prevalent cancer in the world.

Colorectal, lung, cervical, ovarian, uterine (endometrial), and skin cancers are also common in women.

While it is generally not known what exactly causes cancer, past studies show a woman’s risk for cancer depends on a variety of factors. These could include genetics, smoking, obesity, hormones, and environmental risk factors like air pollution and exposure to certain chemicals called “forever chemicals.”

Now, researchers from the University of Southern California have discovered women who developed breast, ovarian, skin, and uterine cancers had significantly higher levels of these types of chemicals in their bodies.

This study was recently published in the Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology.

Medical News Today also spoke with Dr. Jack Jacoub, a board-certified medical oncologist and medical director of MemorialCare Cancer Institute at Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, CA, about this study.

He stated this study does have limitations as it is not able to establish a causal relationship with PFAS and BPA chemicals levels in cancer.

“There is perhaps a relationship because there’s a higher frequency of a certain cancer correlating with a certain level of these chemicals, but because there’s a higher frequency of the cancers, this is a statistical scenario or an issue in that those higher frequency cancers, we need to have more information on those individuals and their cancer.”
— Dr. Jack Jacoub

For readers who may be worried about “forever chemicals” and increased cancer risk, Dr. Jacoub suggested eliminating them from their lifestyle would be the way to go as we wait for more data.

“It’s reasonable to remove some of the things that are everyday kinds of things (where they) might exist,” he continued.

“Plastics — we’re using paper bags, okay, that’s great for the environment and also maybe great for you. All those small little details in someone who may have a preexisting risk of cancer because of family history, because of exposure to radiation, something in their make-up suggests they might have a higher risk of cancer, if you really wanted to be as proactive as humanly possible, understanding the areas where those chemicals exist and eliminating them from your environment would be a positive,” he added.

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