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Breast symmetry can be early indicator of breast cancer, say experts

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Healthy Women who go on to develop breast cancer tend to have less symmetrical breasts than those women who do not develop the disease, researchers at the University of Liverpool have found.

Dr Diane Scutt, Director of Research at the University’s School of Health Sciences, studied mammograms – X-rays of the breast – of more than 500 healthy women. Dr Scutt found that those women who went on to develop the disease had less symmetrical breasts than those who did not develop breast cancer.Dr Scutt examined the difference in volume between the right and left breasts of healthy women, as measured and calculated from their mammograms. This data was combined with other established risk factors such as family history of cancer, to calculate the odds of developing the disease. They found that the odds of developing breast cancer increased by 1.5 (or 50%) for every 100ml increase in breast volume asymmetry. Dr Scutt explains: “Symmetry has always been an important part of our biological make up, for example humans and non-humans who are highly symmetrical are preferred as mates over those who are less symmetrical; it is an indicator of health, fitness and performance. “Humans show symmetry in paired traits such as ear size, digit length and breast volume. Perfect symmetry may be disturbed by a number of factors including the secretion of hormones such as oestrogen. The random deviations from perfect symmetry are termed fluctuating asymmetry (FA). These deviations provide a measure of how the body develops – the more precisely each side develops, the greater the symmetry. “Breasts are more likely to be disrupted during development because they show rapid growth rates and are highly susceptible to mutation. Symmetrical breast development may well be an indicator of an individual’s ability to tolerate ‘disruptive’ hormonal variation. It is essential that we look more closely at symmetry in mammograms as it may be an important indicator of a woman’s risk of developing breast cancer.”(Source: Breast Cancer Research: University of Liverpool: March 2006.)


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Dates

Posted On: 24 March, 2006
Modified On: 16 January, 2014

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