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Risk and Prevention
BRCA Genes and Family History: Understanding Inherited Breast Cancer Risk
BRCA1 and BRCA2 are genes involved in DNA repair. When a person has a harmful change, often called a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant, in one of these genes, the risk of breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and certain other cancers may increase significantly. People whose family history suggests inherited cancer risk should speak with a doctor or genetic counselor before deciding whether genetic testing is appropriate. This article explains what BRCA genes are, who may cons
Breast Cancer Risk Factors and Prevention: A Complete Guide
Risk factors for breast cancer include those you can't change (such as age, gender, and genetics) and those you can control through lifestyle. Understanding these factors will help you take care of yourself and make informed decisions about screening. This guide covers risks and prevention and clarifies some common misconceptions. Risk factors you cannot change. These factors include increasing age, female gender, family and genetic history (e.g., BRCA genes), and reproductiv
Breast cancer risk factors and prevention: An easy-to-understand guide.
Breast cancer risk factors include both unchangeable factors (such as age, gender, and genetics) and modifiable factors through lifestyle. Understanding these factors helps us take care of ourselves and make appropriate screening decisions. This article covers risk factors and prevention, along with debunking common misconceptions. Unchangeable risk factors These include older age, female gender, family history and genetics (e.g., BRCA genes), and a history of early or late m


Does Collagen Increase Breast Cancer Risk?
Collagen supplements and breast cancer risk is a common question as collagen products grow popular. Based on current evidence, there is no clear proof that collagen supplements increase breast cancer risk — but the research is limited, so a cautious, informed approach is sensible. What the evidence says Current published evidence does not clearly show that collagen supplements raise breast cancer risk. However, studies are limited and supplement products vary widely in conten


Soy and breast cancer
Does soy affect breast cancer risk? Soy and breast cancer is a common concern because soy contains plant compounds similar to oestrogen. However, current evidence does not show that normal dietary amounts of soy increase breast cancer risk — and some research suggests it may even be neutral or protective. Soy and Breast Cancer: Solved with Facts from Research อาหารจากถั่วเหลือง The belief that soy consumption may increase breast cancer risk has long been a source of confusion


Birth Control Pills and Breast Cancer Risk
Several studies suggest that using hormonal birth control pills may slightly increase the risk of breast cancer. However, this risk depends


PM2.5 dust pollution and breast cancer risk
long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and an increased risk of breast cancer
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