University at Buffalo: Reporter

UB receives $1.6 million grant for alcohol/breast cancer study

By LOIS BAKER
News Services Editor

University at Buffalo scientists have received a $1.6 million grant from the U.S. Army's special program for breast cancer research to investigate the relationship between alcohol consumption and breast cancer.

The study, headed by Jo Freudenheim, associate professor of social and preventive medicine, will involve nearly 4,000 women from Erie and Niagara counties.

The research is an offshoot of an $8 million, multifaceted investigation of alcohol and its relationship to chronic diseases being carried out jointly by UB's Center for Preventive Medicine and the Research Institute on Addictions in Buffalo.

The study group will be composed of 1,350 women with confirmed breast cancer, and 2,030 randomly-selected healthy women to serve as controls. Participants will be between the ages of 35-79.

"There is a fair amount of evidence that alcohol may be related to breast cancer," said Freudenheim, "but most research has used inadequate measures of alcohol intake. We will be making careful measures of lifetime alcohol consumption, as well as collecting data on diet, physical activity and reproductive history."

The researchers also will assess genetic differences in the way individuals metabolize alcohol, and will compare cancer rates among "fast" and "slow" metabolizers. A specimen bank will be created to store blood samples for current and future research.

Freudenheim said researchers theorize that alcohol may influence the development of breast cancer by changing the body's steroid hormone levels, or by increasing oxidation. Both of these mechanisms, and others, will be investigated via subgroups of the study population.

"In a well-run study, scientists can answer many questions," Freudenheim said. "There is so much we don't know about breast cancer and how it develops. People have been looking at the question for a long time. We need to look in more depth at lifetime habits. This study provides an excellent chance to get some new, potentially significant insights into breast cancer prevention."


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