Australian scientists claim that breast cancer may spread through sex and bathing

Australian scientists claim that breast cancer may spread through sex and bathing

Release date: 2006-12-15

Australian scientists claim that breast cancer may spread through sex and bathing A researcher at the University of New South Wales said breast cancer may be sexually transmitted. He found the same virus that causes cervical cancer in Australian women with breast cancer.
Investigation: Near-semi-cancerous cancer patients have cervical cancer virus
University of New South Wales honorary retired professor James Lawson and colleagues published a DNA analysis analysis, found that 24 of the 50 breast cancer samples were human papillomavirus type 18, indicating that breast cancer patients also cause cervical The same virus of cancer.
Lawson said that human papillomavirus may spread through sexual activity or bathing, and the virus may enter the breast from the genital area through the nipple duct. Of course, bathing can also spread the human papilloma virus. But whether human papillomavirus causes breast cancer, or whether breast cancer patients are more susceptible to the virus requires more research.
Example: Young women are more dangerous
Lawson pointed out in the paper that a study reviewing relevant data in 2005 showed that on average, breast cancer patients infected with human papillomavirus were about 8 years younger than those who showed no infection with the virus. He said that this increases the credibility of sexual communication theory, because human papillomavirus is more common in younger women, and they are more likely than older women to have multiple sexual partners.
Treatment: Can cervical cancer vaccine fight breast cancer?
Lawson said that if the human papilloma virus really causes breast cancer and cervical cancer, the cervical cancer vaccine invented by Professor Ian Fraser, the "Australian Person of the Year", should also reduce the rate of breast cancer. Lawson said he is currently working on a study in this area.
Question: There is still no credible evidence
However, some scientists have studied 81 Swiss women and found no evidence that human papillomavirus causes breast cancer. Professor Olver, chairman of the Australian Cancer Council, said: "At present, we have only a few small studies showing a link between human papillomavirus and breast cancer, but the researchers did not give evidence to prove that they have a causal relationship. I think further research is needed. Find more convincing evidence." (China News Network)

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