Medical Uni References – Pregnancy Issue and Contraceptive Prevalence Rate

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Breast Cancer and the birth control pill

The maximum priority has always been given to the relationship that is between the pills and breast cancer. However, with the pace of time and enhancement in technology, some answers are slowly emerging. The CDC (Centers for Disease Control) conducted a research in the 1980s entitled as the “Cancer and Steroid Hormone Study”. In this research, they studied about 5,000 breast cancer’s cases and 5,000 healthy women and stated that there wasn’t increased risk of the breast cancer among the women who preferred using the pills.

A current meta analysis which revisited the oral contraceptives and the breast cancer’s risk, published in October of 2006, stated that oral contraceptives are responsible for increasing the risk of being suffered with the premenopausal breast cancer. 34 case-control studies of premenopausal breast cancer and oral contraceptives throughout or after the 1980s were identified. The results of these studies exhibited that the breast cancer’s risk was vaguely increased for both parous (have already given birth one or more times) and nulliparous (have never given birth before) women.

The usage of pill for long duration didn’t significantly affect the risk among the nulliparous women. Whereas, when it comes to parous women, the increased risk was more considerable when uses of oral contraceptives were done before the very first and full term pregnancy. Parous women preferring pill for 4 or more years before their very first and full pregnancy were under the greater risk circle. There are numerous limitations arriving with this sort of review due to the presence of so many variables, including possible recall bias, race, difference in age of first preferring the pill, and deprived information on time the pills were last used. Overall, it seems as there are not any evidence illustrating that lifetime risk of being suffered with breast cancer in women arrive with the usage of oral contraceptives.

Before you decide to use or go against BCPs, you first need to consider the risk for your breast cancer (although majority of women suffering with breast cancer are not inside the risky circle, and most of them who are at risk usually don’t get it).