Cancer Vitamin D halves breast cancer risk in premenopausal women
By David Liu Ph.D.
Dec 12, 2008 - 8:57:03 AM
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Friday Dec 12, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- A new study published
in the Jan 2009 issue of International Journal of Cancer found that premenopausal
women who had higher levels of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D or 25(OH)D were
significantly less likely to develop breast cancer.
Laboratory and epidemiological studies have already linked
vitamin D to breast cancer prevention although vitamin D levels considered in
the studies mostly came from diet.
The current population-based case-control study involving
289 cases and 595 matched controls examined the association between plasma
25(OH)D and breast cancer risk.
Abbas S and colleagues from German Cancer Research Center
in Heidelberg, Germany found that compared to premenopausal women who had only
less than 30 nmol/L vitamin D, women who had 30-45, 45-60, >/=60 nmol/L were
at a 32, 41 and 55 percent reduced risk of breast cancer respectively.
One interesting finding is that the protective effect was
in a non-linear relationship with the plasma vitamin D level and there seemed
to be a threshold at about 50 nmol/L.
Dr. John Cannell, a vitamin D expert and founder of Vitamin
D Council, a non-profit-educational organization, suggested that only high
serum levels of vitamin D result in an anticancer effect.
From the current study, Abbas and colleagues also found
the protective effect was stronger on progesterone receptor negative tumors.
They concluded that "Our findings support a
protective effect of vitamin D for premenopausal breast cancer."