Doctor: Abortion-Breast Cancer Link is Convincing
by Dr. Angela Lanfranchi
When I first heard of the link between abortion and breast cancer, in
1993, I thought it was a pro-life fantasy. "That's crazy," was my initial
response. However, out of curiosity I changed the history form I used in my work as a
breast surgeon, asking each woman the order and outcome of all pregnancies. The results
surprised me.
In the first six months I had two patients in their 30s with breast
cancer; one had had seven pregnancies and six abortions, the other five pregnancies and
three abortions. I continued to see more and more young women with a history of abortion,
developing breast cancer. Of course, I
may have been witnessing a statistical fluke.
But then, in 1996, City University of New York Professor Joel Brind
published his meta-analysis, which revealed 23 of 28 studies showing a link between
abortion and breast cancer. The uproar that study caused in Britain, where it was
published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, prompted the editor to
write: "I believe that if you take a view (as I do) which is pro-choice, you need at
the same time to have a view which might be called pro-information without excessive
paternalistic censorship (or interpretation) of the data."
Paternalistic censorship is what I experience every time I try to
speak on the science supporting the abortion-breast cancer link.
About 85 per cent of cigarette smokers do not get lung cancer. Doctors who
tell their patients of the risk of lung cancer are not labelled fear-mongers. Similarly,
not all women who have had an abortion will get breast cancer; only 5 per cent will
develop the disease. And 95 per cent of breast cancer patients will not have a history of
abortion. But some women are at especially high risk. And 5 percent still adds up to a lot
of women.
The 1994 Daling study published in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute showed that teenagers younger than 18 who had abortions between nine and 24
weeks had nearly a 30 per cent chance of getting breast cancer in their lifetimes. The US
National Cancer Institute's web page on reproductive risk informs women there are studies
that show this link.
Many people ask me about first trimester miscarriage. This is quite
different, in its effect on the woman's breasts, from induced abortion of a normal
pregnancy. Miscarriages do not increase breast cancer risk, since they are associated with
low oestrogen levels that do not cause breast growth. However, when pregnancy is
terminated before the breast cells reach full maturity, a woman is left with more immature
type 1 and 2 breast lobules (milk glands) than before her pregnancy started, and therefore
is at increased risk. Her breasts never mature to type 3 and 4 lobules, which would have
occurred in the third trimester and would have lowered her risk.
Ideology should not prevent the dissemination of this information.
Australia's breast cancer organisations are not helping women exercise informed consent
when they deny them this knowledge. There are three legal actions in the US by women who
were not told of the link before having an abortion.
As Dr Janet Daling, who identifies herself as being pro-choice, says:
"If politics gets involved in science, it will really hold back the progress we make.
I have three sisters with breast cancer, and I resent people messing with the scientific
data to further their own agenda, be they
pro-choice or pro-life. I would have loved to have found no association between breast
cancer and abortion, but our research is rock solid, and our data is accurate. It's not a
matter of believing. It's a matter of what is."
Information only empowers women to make informed choices. Women who choose
abortions need to be aware that they are at higher risk, so they will have mammograms
earlier and more regularly. Cancers found on mammograms are more likely to be stage 1 and
curable. No woman should die of breast cancer because she was not warned.
I watched my mother die of metastatic breast cancer. In my practice, I see
young women with small children die of breast cancer. If the information I give patients
can prevent a single death from a completely avoidable risk, I will gladly pay the price
of being labelled a fear-monger.
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