logo
Abortion drug could help reduce risk of breast cancer, group of medics says

Abortion drug could help reduce risk of breast cancer, group of medics says

The Guardian20 hours ago
A drug used in medical abortions could help prevent women at high risk of breast cancer from developing the disease, according to an international group of doctors and scientists.
However, 'stigma' around mifepristone is stopping pharmaceutical companies from investigating its potential as a new treatment doctors could offer to reduce the risk of breast cancer, they say.
Companies appear reluctant to carry out trials despite the fact that three previous studies all found that the drug shows promise as a way of slowing down the growth of cancerous cells.
Mifepristone's role in medical abortions and fact that access to abortion is restricted in some countries is preventing much-needed research being done, the experts claim.
It is one of two drugs, alongside misoprostol, that women in the UK take when ending a pregnancy that began up to 10 weeks earlier. They take a mifepristone tablet, then wait for 24-48 hours and then take the misoprostol.
'It is deeply disappointing that the successful application of mifepristone in one area of clinical medicine is hindering more extensive research into other indications that could benefit public health,' the opinion piece written by eight co-authors and published in The Lancet Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Women's Health says. All are experts in reproductive health or reproductive cancer working in London, Edinburgh, Stockholm and Erbil in Iraq.
'The time is long overdue to give mifepristone the opportunity it deserves to be investigated as a non-surgical option for primary prevention [of breast cancer],' they add.
Breast cancer is the most common female cancer in most countries in the world and kills an estimated 670,000 women globally every year, according to the World Health Organization.
Although small-scale, the three previous studies offered evidence mifepristone can limit the effect of the hormone progesterone, which drives the cell growth found in breast cancer. They were published in 2008, 2022 and 2024.
Mifepristone is a type of drug known as a selective progesterone receptor modulator.
If proven to work, it could help women who are at high risk of breast cancer, such as those who carry a variant of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. Currently they are offered surgical options for their treatment, such as a mastectomy, or drugs that are of 'low efficacy', the authors say.
UK cancer charities endorsed the plea for drug companies to look seriously into the role mifepristone could play in breast cancer care and for governments to enable that to happen by easing regulations that restrict its use to abortion.
Dr Simon Vincent, the chief scientific officer at Breast Cancer Now, said: 'More risk-reducing treatment options for women with a high risk of developing breast cancer, that also protects their quality of life, are desperately needed. And we need to explore all avenues, including existing drugs, to achieve this.
'So early research into mifepristone is an important step forward and we need further studies to understand if these drugs are safe and effective.'
Dr Marianne Baker, Cancer Research UK's science engagement manager, said the 57,900 new diagnoses a year of breast cancer in Britain showed that 'it's vital we invest in research exploring new ways to prevent the disease'.
She added: 'Cancer develops when cells grow uncontrollably. Early studies showed that mifepristone slowed down cell growth in breast tissue, so it might be useful in delaying or preventing cancer.
'But we need more research to understand whether it's effective, how it works and who would benefit most from it.'
Prof Kristina Gemzell Danielsson, the piece's lead author, and who heads the department of women's and children's health at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, said: 'Stigma around mifepristone used for abortion is describing part of why mifepristone is not more extensively researched for prevention of breast cancer.
'Taken together, our data support the use of mifepristone for prevention of poor prognosis breast cancer. All studies were randomised controlled trials using a low dose of mifepristone for two or three months.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mysterious change in Pacific to 'lock' US in megadrought that'll send food prices soaring for DECADES
Mysterious change in Pacific to 'lock' US in megadrought that'll send food prices soaring for DECADES

Daily Mail​

time24 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mysterious change in Pacific to 'lock' US in megadrought that'll send food prices soaring for DECADES

A troubling shift in the Pacific Ocean has trapped the US in a megadrought, with scientists warning it could drive devastating wildfires, food shortages, and soaring prices for decades. Researchers from the University of Colorado Boulder have found that a natural Pacific climate cycle, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), is stuck in a 'negative' phase, bringing dangerously dry conditions to much of the US West Coast. The PDO acts like a slow-moving seesaw, swinging ocean surface temperatures between warmer and cooler phases every 20 to 30 years. Its current negative phase cools waters along North America's west coast and warms the central Pacific, a combination that disrupts rainfall patterns, intensifies drought, and fuels heat. Unlike regular droughts that can last months or a few years, a megadrought can linger for decades or more, with extreme dryness and little rainfall drying up the soil, rivers, and local reservoirs. The current megadrought, ongoing since around 2000, has impacted Southwestern states like California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, and parts of Oregon, Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The extreme dryness has already lasted more than two decades, but researchers discovered the PDO shows no signs of changing to a 'positive' phase of wet weather because of a new factor impacting the planet: man-made greenhouse emissions. The extreme conditions in the Southwest are predicted to bring even more devastating fires to several states before the end of 2025 and for years to come. California, the nation's top agricultural state, produces over a third of America's vegetables and two-thirds of its fruits and nuts, including almonds, lettuce, and tomatoes. Severe water shortages since 2021 have forced farmers to leave hundreds of thousands of acres unplanted. Arizona, Nevada, and Utah, key dairy and meat producers, are also facing shrinking herds and reduced milk production. All of this leads to small crop yields, higher food prices, livestock struggling to provide enough milk for cheese and butter, and food insecurity for those unable to afford their everyday groceries. The study's findings, published in the journal Nature, challenged the long-held belief that the PDO's regular shifts were only driven by natural processes, such as ocean currents and atmospheric patterns. This new research showed that human-induced changes to the planet now account for more than half (53%) of the variations in the PDO dating back to 1950. Researchers found that the impact of man-made climate change has altered the PDO, essentially locking it into a permanent 'negative' trend since the 1980s, gradually drying out these key regions for food production. Human activities, particularly the emission of greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels in cars, factories, and power plants, have trapped heat and warmed the central Pacific more than what naturally occurs every few decades. The dire conditions have also fueled massive wildfires throughout several states from Texas to California, including January's blaze in Los Angeles that destroyed more than 50,000 acres of land and over 16,000 homes. Firefighters have been battling more wildfires throughout the western US as dry conditions have lingered for decades Specifically, high levels of aerosols in the atmosphere before the 1980s fueled a 'positive phase' along the West Coast. During this time, the central Pacific was cooler, and the waters along North America's coast were warmer, often bringing wetter weather to the western US. Aerosols, tiny particles coming from industrial activities like burning coal and manufacturing from the 50s to the 80s, are still a form of human pollution, but they reflect sunlight into space, cooling the Pacific. As the world cut back on this form of pollution, other emissions like carbon dioxide drastically warmed the planet and locked the PDO into a 'negative' trend of dry weather. Study author Jeremy Klavans from the University of Colorado said: 'Climate models taken at face value didn't have the answer for us.' 'They told us it was bad luck,' he told New Scientist. To prove that the phenomenon was man-made and not an unusually long cycle of natural dryness, the scientists used a massive collection of 572 climate model simulations on the PDO. These simulations included various external factors like greenhouse gas emissions, aerosol pollution, volcanic eruptions, and solar changes, covering the period from 1950 to 2014. Researchers were even able to adjust for the impact of El Niño and La Niña events, which can affect the PDO over shorter windows of time. The results of these simulations continued to show that rising greenhouse gas emissions, combined with less aerosol pollution, could keep wetter weather away from the West Coast far beyond what naturally occurs without climate change. Pedro DiNezio, also from the University of Colorado, said: 'We looked into the future, and models make it persist for at least a few more decades.' 'As long as the northern hemisphere continues to warm, the PDO will be stuck in this negative phase,' the study author warned. The ongoing drought could lead to more devastating fires along the West Coast later this year. Meteorologists have forecasted that California could see up to 1.5 million acres of land burn before the end of 2025.

How wrinkled your skin gets after a shower might be your body's silent warning sign of serious disease
How wrinkled your skin gets after a shower might be your body's silent warning sign of serious disease

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

How wrinkled your skin gets after a shower might be your body's silent warning sign of serious disease

Just a few minutes in the shower or pool is enough to turn your fingers into wrinkly prunes. Skin wrinkling after a shower or bath, or aquagenic wrinkling, usually occurs after about three and a half minutes in temperatures above 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 Celsius). Most people generally shower in temperatures between 98 and 105 degrees Fahrenheit (37 to 41 Celsius). Wrinkling occurs because the outer layer of skin on the fingers and toes tends to be thicker than the rest of the body and contains more dead skin cells, which absorb water, causing swelling. Water also constricts blood vessels, restricting blood volume and making fingers and toes shrink and wrinkle. It's thought that human skin evolved to wrinkle to help grip objects in wet conditions, such as rocks or floors. Wrinkles on their own are generally considered harmless. But depending on how wrinkled your skin gets, it may reveal if you are suffering from chronic, and potentially deadly, conditions like diabetes or Parkinson's disease. Skin around the fingers and toes has more dead skin cells that are rich in keratin, a protein that absorbs water. This causes increased swelling and wrinkling in these areas compared to the rest of the body. Additionally, the autonomic nervous system constricts blood vessels in response to water, which reduces blood volume in the skin and causes it to shrink. People with diabetes may have less wrinkled fingers and toes compared to those without the condition. Diabetes can damage nerves in the fingers and toes, a condition called peripheral neuropathy. Nerve damage reduces the function of sweat glands and blood vessels in the extremities, making them less able to absorb water. This results in reduced wrinkling. Parkinson's disease, which affects 1million Americans, has also been shown to affect skin wrinkling after a bath or shower. This is particularly seen in people with hemiparkinsonism, a form of the disease that only affects one side of the body. Parkinson's disease kills off nerve cells responsible for dopamine production. Those nerves also control sweat glands and blood vessel constriction, so people with Parkinson's on one side of the body may have less wrinkling than the other side. Meanwhile, people with cystic fibrosis may get more wrinkled when they step out of the shower. Cystic fibrosis, a genetic condition suffered by 40,000 Americans, causes a thick mucus to form in the lungs and digestive tract. Recent research shows up to eight in 10 cystic fibrosis patients have increased aquagenic wrinkling, particularly in their palms, which is thought to be caused by imbalances in the sweat glands caused by the condition. Aquagenic wrinkling on its own is usually harmless, but because it is so closely tied with cystic fibrosis, doctors recommend seeking medical attention to get screened.

Earthquake swarm rocks California with shaking in Los Angeles
Earthquake swarm rocks California with shaking in Los Angeles

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Earthquake swarm rocks California with shaking in Los Angeles

Southern California has experienced three earthquakes in less than 12 hours, with two hitting about 10 minutes apart. The US Geological Survey (USGS) detected the first at 4am ET and the others hit at about eight hours later, with the largest measuring a 3.6 magnitude. While the weaker tremors measured a 2.7 magnitude, scientists noted the activity was strong enough to be felt by humans. No injuries or damages have been reported. The seismic activity occurred along the San Jacinto Fault Zone, a major strike-slip fault zone that runs through San Bernardino, Riverside, San Diego and Imperial Counties in Southern California. The very active fault is capable of unleashing a magnitude 7 or greater earthquake, but is known to generate moderate earthquakes between magnitude 5.0 and 6.5. This is a developing story... More updates to come.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store