Research Results
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2019
J Natl Cancer Inst
This study of over 700 women found that DDT exposure was associated with increased breast cancer risk through age 54, but the timing of first exposure mattered critically: women first exposed to DDT after infancy had nearly triple the risk of early postmenopausal breast cancer (ages 50-54), while women first exposed during infancy through puberty had nearly four times the risk of premenopausal breast cancer (before age 50). These findings suggest there are specific windows of vulnerability when DDT exposure has the strongest impact on future breast cancer risk, with effects that can persist for decades. The results support the idea that DDT acts as an endocrine disruptor affecting breast tissue throughout a woman’s life—from before birth through menopause—even though DDT was banned in the U.S. in 1972, highlighting the long-term health consequences of early-life chemical exposures.
2018
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
This study examined how exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) during puberty affects breast tissue development in 200 Chilean girls by measuring urinary concentrations of phenols and phthalates at two stages of breast development and assessing breast density. The researchers found that certain phthalate metabolites were associated with increased breast density measures – specifically, higher levels of monocarboxyisooctyl phthalate were linked to 7% higher percent dense breast tissue, and monoethyl phthalate was associated with increased fibroglandular volume. Bisphenol A showed a U-shaped relationship with fibroglandular volume, where girls with middle-level exposures had at least 10% lower fibroglandular volume compared to those with low or high exposures. The findings suggest that developing breast tissue is vulnerable to certain EDCs during childhood and adolescence, which may have implications for future breast cancer risk since breast density is a known risk factor.
2018
Environ Health
This longitudinal study examined how exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) affects the timing of menarche in Chilean girls by measuring 26 phenol and phthalate compounds in urine samples collected before breast development and during adolescence. The researchers found that different chemicals had varying effects depending on when exposure was measured: higher early exposure to DEHP was associated with later menarche, while early exposure to certain phenols and later exposure to some phthalates were linked to earlier menarche. The study also revealed that body weight influenced these effects, with overweight or obese girls showing earlier menarche when exposed to higher levels of certain chemicals like triclosan, while normal-weight girls did not show this association. These findings demonstrate that specific EDCs can disrupt normal sexual development in girls, with timing of exposure and body weight being important factors.
2025
Int J Hyg Environ Health
New research highlights the link between endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) and earlier breast development in girls. A systematic review of 68 studies found that 10 out of 14 high-quality studies linked prenatal and postnatal exposure to EDCs like organohalogenated compounds and phthalates to earlier thelarche. With thelarche now occurring nearly three months earlier per decade, these findings raise serious concerns about long-term health risks, including breast cancer. Reducing exposure to harmful chemicals in everyday products is crucial to protecting hormonal health and preventing early puberty.
2024
Cancer Med
A mouse study found that exposure to bacterial toxins (lipopolysaccharides or LPS) during puberty—a critical period for breast development—caused lasting inflammation and changes in gene expression that increased breast cancer risk later in life. Researchers discovered that a prebiotic supplement derived from shiitake mushrooms (AHCC) could counteract these harmful effects by reducing inflammation, regulating immune signaling molecules, and blocking cancer-promoting gene activity in mammary tissue. The findings suggest that gut health and inflammation during puberty may influence long-term breast cancer risk, and that dietary interventions like prebiotics might offer a preventive strategy, though human studies are needed to confirm these results.
2023
Frontiers
This meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the association between exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), including phthalates and other common environmental pollutants, and breast cancer risk. The study found that certain EDCs—such as p,p′-DDT, chlordane, HCH, and specific PCBs—were positively associated with increased breast cancer risk, while a few compounds like BBP and PFDoDA showed a negative association.
2020
Environ Res
A systematic review of 100 publications across 56 epidemiologic studies found that research enriched with women at higher baseline breast cancer risk—through family history, early-onset disease, or genetic susceptibility—consistently showed stronger and more frequent associations between environmental chemical exposures and breast cancer compared to average-risk populations. Specifically, 80% of studies enriched with family history or early-onset cases showed significant associations with exposures including PAHs, air pollution, DDT, PCBs, PFAS, metals, personal care products, and occupational chemicals, while 74% of studies examining genetic susceptibility found significant gene-environment interactions for various pollutants in women with variants affecting carcinogen metabolism, DNA repair, and oxidative stress. These findings suggest that the inconsistent evidence for environmental chemicals and breast cancer in the literature may partly stem from studying predominantly average-risk populations who may be less susceptible to environmental carcinogens, highlighting the critical need for future research to focus on high-risk populations and measure exposures during key windows of susceptibility (puberty, pregnancy, menopause) to more accurately capture the role of environmental chemicals in breast cancer development.
2020
Breast Cancer Res Treat
A pilot study of 37 breast cancer patients found that women with HER2-positive breast cancer (an aggressive subtype) had 12-23% lower gut bacterial diversity and different bacterial compositions compared to HER2-negative patients, with less Firmicutes and more Bacteroidetes bacteria. The research also revealed that women who started menstruating early (age 11 or younger) and those with higher body fat had lower gut bacterial diversity, suggesting links between gut microbiome composition and known breast cancer risk factors. While the study was small, these findings indicate that gut bacteria composition may be connected to both breast cancer characteristics and established risk factors, warranting larger studies to better understand these relationships and their potential implications for prevention and treatment.
2019
BMC Women's Health
A case-control study of 450 Jordanian women (225 cases, 225 controls) aged 18-65 examined associations between oral contraceptive (OC) use and breast cancer risk in a Middle Eastern population. Regular OC use was associated with more than double the breast cancer risk (OR=2.25; 95% CI: 1.34-2.79; p=0.002), though duration of use showed no significant association (p>0.05), with additional significant risk factors including age at puberty, age at menopause, pregnancy history, menopausal status, and family history of cancer. These findings suggest that regular oral contraceptive use may be associated with increased breast cancer risk in Jordanian women, though the lack of duration-response relationship is inconsistent with some other studies and the authors note that larger multi-center studies are needed to confirm these findings in the Middle Eastern female population where limited research on OC use and breast cancer has been conducted.
2019
Arch Med Res
A case-control study of 101 incident breast cancer cases and 101 matched controls at the Instituto de Seguridad Social del Estado de México y Municipios found that women who worked night shifts had 8.58-fold higher odds of breast cancer compared to those who never worked nights (OR=8.58; 95% CI: 2.19-33.8), while breastfeeding was protective (OR=0.12; 95% CI: 0.02-0.60) and early menarche ≤12 years increased risk (OR=18.58; 95% CI: 2.19-148). Despite the small sample size yielding wide confidence intervals, these findings from Mexican women are consistent with studies from other countries positively associating night shift work with breast cancer risk. The results support the hypothesis that night shift work involving circadian disruption increases breast cancer risk, though the large effect size and wide confidence intervals suggest the need for larger studies with more precise estimates to confirm these associations in Mexican populations.
2024
Endocrinology
The researchers in this study aimed to identify certain environmental chemicals that may contribute to the trend of earlier puberty onset in females by stimulating 2 key receptors. These receptors being investigated are kisseptin and gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptors in the hypothalamus which are highly involved in triggering puberty in females. The study identified musk ambrette, a synthetic fragrance commonly used in personal care products like perfumes, soaps, and detergents, as an agonist of KISS1R and triggered the release of Gnrh1, which could be a cause of early puberty as well. Additionally, agonists of GnRHR were investigated and found to be mainly from a group of cholinergic agonists with structures similar to methacholine. These agonists upregulated Fos, Jun, and Egr1 genes in the downstream pathway of GnRHR. Agonists such as musk ambrette and those that stimulate GnRHR may therefore contribute to early puberty due to their stimulation of key pathways involved in puberty.
2022
Int J Pediatr Adolesc Med
A cross-sectional study of 556 U.S. children (mean age 6.33 years) found no association between regular exposure to lavender or tea tree essential oils and endocrine disruption, with prevalence of endocrine disorders (0.016) and rates of precocious puberty, delayed puberty, growth hormone deficiency, and hypothyroidism all consistent with population norms, and no cases of prepubertal gynecomastia identified in either exposed or unexposed groups (risk ratio = 2.796; 95% CI: 0.352-22.163, p = .458). This first epidemiological study addressing concerns about these popular essential oils in pediatric personal care products found that children regularly exposed to lavender or tea tree essential oils experienced the same risk of endocrine disorders as unexposed children, providing no evidence for the previously proposed link between these oils and pediatric endocrine disruption.
2018
Reprod Toxicol
A developmental toxicology study exposed CD-1 mice to bisphenol S (BPS) at 2 or 200 μg/kg/day or ethinyl estradiol (EE2) at 0.01 or 1 μg/kg/day during pregnancy and lactation, then examined mammary glands of female offspring at three developmental stages (pre-puberty, puberty, and early adulthood) for growth parameters, histopathology, cell proliferation, and hormone receptor expression. The study revealed age- and dose-specific effects of BPS on mammary gland development that differed from both EE2 effects and previously reported bisphenol A (BPA) effects. These findings suggest that individual xenoestrogens—synthetic chemicals with hormonal activities—may have unique effects on mammary tissue development, supporting the hypothesis that endocrine-disrupting chemicals could contribute to breast diseases and dysfunction through disruption of normal mammary gland development, though each compound may act through distinct mechanisms.
2003
Environ Health Perspect
Children are particularly vulnerable to endocrine disruptors (EDs), chemicals that interfere with hormonal systems, potentially impacting development. EDCs can disrupt feedback loops in the brain, thyroid, and the endocrine system. Even more, there are plenty of documented effects in wildlife, experimental animals, and to a lesser extent, humans. Early life exposure to EDCs is linked to contributing to declining semen quality, increased reproductive organ malformations, rising testicular cancer rates, and earlier puberty in females. The National Children’s Study (NCS) plans to investigate these potential impacts by examining EDC exposure, genetic factors, and associated health outcomes over time, helping to clarify the long-term effects of EDs.