© Jim Young
/ Reuters
|
Women exposed to bovine
leukaemia virus, a routine presence in bulk milk tanks at large dairy farms,
are 3.1 times more likely to develop breast cancer than women whose tissue was
not subject to the virus, known as BLV, according to a new study. These odds are higher than those associated with
other top breast cancer risks, including obesity and alcohol consumption, according
to researchers at the University of California Berkeley.
The
research team analyzed breast tissue from 239 women, some who had breast cancer
and some who did not. They found that 59 percent of breast cancer cells showed
exposure to BLV in their DNA, while cells from women who had not contracted
breast cancer only had 29-percent exposure to BLV.
The
link between BLV – which, while common in dairy and beef cattle, only affects 5
percent of cattle that have the virus – and breast cancer is significant, the
researchers said, but not a conclusive cause-effect.
RT report continues:
"The
association between BLV infection and breast cancer was surprising to many
previous reviewers of the study, but it's important to note that our results do
not prove that the virus causes cancer," said
Dr. Gertrude Buehring, a professor of virology at the University of
California Berkeley. "However, this is the most important first step. We
still need to confirm that the infection with the virus happened before, not
after, breast cancer developed, and if so, how."
The
same group of researchers reported last
year that BLV could be transferred to humans. BLV infects cattle's blood cells
and mammary tissue, and was long thought not to be a threat to humans.
"Studies
done in the 1970s failed to detect evidence of human infection with BLV,"
said Buehring. "The tests we have now are more sensitive, but it was still
hard to overturn the established dogma that BLV was not transmissible to
humans. As a result, there has been little incentive for the cattle industry to
set up procedures to contain the spread of the virus."
Tissue analyzed by the research team was donated via the Cooperate Human Tissue Network. The odds of having breast cancer if BLV was present in tissue was 3.1 times higher than if BLV was not present in tissue, the researchers said.
Tissue analyzed by the research team was donated via the Cooperate Human Tissue Network. The odds of having breast cancer if BLV was present in tissue was 3.1 times higher than if BLV was not present in tissue, the researchers said.
"This
odds ratio is higher than any of the frequently publicized risk factors for
breast cancer, such as obesity, alcohol consumption and use of post-menopausal
hormones," said Buehring.
In 2007, the US Department of Agriculture reported that 100 percent of bulk milk tanks at dairy farms with at least 500 cows tested positive for BLV, while 83 percent of operations with less than 100 cows tested positive for BLV.
In 2007, the US Department of Agriculture reported that 100 percent of bulk milk tanks at dairy farms with at least 500 cows tested positive for BLV, while 83 percent of operations with less than 100 cows tested positive for BLV.
Buehring
said the new research did not posit a direct correlation between BLV exposure
and breast cancer. But, if the link does further materialize, there is hope, as
vaccines have been developed to counter the Hepatitis B virus -- known to cause
liver cancer -- and the human papillomavirus, a cause of cervical and anal
cancer.
"If
BLV were proven to be a cause of breast cancer, it could change the way we
currently look at breast cancer control," said Buehring. "It could
shift the emphasis to prevention of breast cancer, rather than trying to cure
or control it after it has already occurred."
The
research team did not identify how BLV infected human tissue. The virus may
have been delivered through unpasteurized milk, undercooked meat, or via
another human.
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