<p>Smoking may increase the risk of dying early in pre-menopausal women with breast cancer, a research said.<br /><br /></p>.<p>"Overall, this work is monumental in advising patients about how smoking might affect breast cancer outcome," said co-author Yuko Minami from Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Miyagi, Japan.<br /><br />This study included 848 patients admitted to a single hospital in Japan from 1997 to 2007. Active or passive smoking status was assessed using a self-administered questionnaire.<br />The patients were followed until December 31, 2010.<br /><br />The researchers found that pre-menopausal women who smoked for more than 21.5 years had a 3.1-times higher risk of dying from any cause and a 3.4-times higher risk of dying from breast cancer.<br /><br />These links were not apparent among post-menopausal women.<br /><br />The increased risks seen in pre-menopausal women were especially relevant to women whose cancers expressed both the estrogen receptor and the progesterone receptor, the study said.<br /><br />"Hopefully this paper will serve to reduce the number of breast cancer patients who continue to smoke," Minami said.<br /><br />The results appeared in the journal Cancer Science.<br /></p>
<p>Smoking may increase the risk of dying early in pre-menopausal women with breast cancer, a research said.<br /><br /></p>.<p>"Overall, this work is monumental in advising patients about how smoking might affect breast cancer outcome," said co-author Yuko Minami from Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Miyagi, Japan.<br /><br />This study included 848 patients admitted to a single hospital in Japan from 1997 to 2007. Active or passive smoking status was assessed using a self-administered questionnaire.<br />The patients were followed until December 31, 2010.<br /><br />The researchers found that pre-menopausal women who smoked for more than 21.5 years had a 3.1-times higher risk of dying from any cause and a 3.4-times higher risk of dying from breast cancer.<br /><br />These links were not apparent among post-menopausal women.<br /><br />The increased risks seen in pre-menopausal women were especially relevant to women whose cancers expressed both the estrogen receptor and the progesterone receptor, the study said.<br /><br />"Hopefully this paper will serve to reduce the number of breast cancer patients who continue to smoke," Minami said.<br /><br />The results appeared in the journal Cancer Science.<br /></p>