donate corporate_partners web_sponsors contact_us press_room
banner
  Breast Cancer Menopause & Women's Health Ending Breast Cancer Clinicians & Researchers
  search
advanced_search
About the Foundation
Love's Army & the Army of Women
Symposium & Think Tanks
Grants & Funding
Giving Opportunities
Corporate Partners & Web Sponsors
Events
Publications
Press Room
Our Blog
 
print
clippings
email
clippings
 
subscribe
Join Us Donate
High Risk / Assessing Your Risk scissors

Every woman wants to know what her risk of getting breast cancer is and what she can do about it.

The term "risk factor" refers to identifiable factors that make some people more susceptible than others to a particular disease. In breast cancer, we have come up with some risk factors. But so far, there is nothing comparable to the connections found between smoking and lung cancer. In fact, 70 percent of breast cancer patients have none of the known risk factors.

Important Points
Probability of a Woman Developing Breast Cancer by Age 75 by Race/Ethnicity*
  % No.
White 8.2 1 in 12
African-American 7.0 1 in 14
New-Mexican Hispanic 4.8 1 in 21
New-Mexican American Indian 2.5 1 in 40
Japanese-American 5.4 1 in 19
Chinese-American 6.1 1 in 16
Note: Table calculates risk to age 75 (1 in 12) rather than the familiar 1 in 8 calculated to age 85.

*J. W. Berg, "Clinical Implications of Risk Factors for Breast Cancer," Cancer 53 (1984): 589. Reprinted with permission.

Genetic Risk Factors
We divide breast cancer occurrences into three groupings. The first, and most common, is sporadic—that's the women with breast cancer who have no known family history of the disease. The second is genetic—there's one dominant cancer gene, and it's passed on to the succeeding generations. The third is polygenic, and it occurs when there is a family history of breast cancer that isn't directly passed on through each generation in one dominant gene—some members of the family will get it and others won't. Women in this category are at greater risk for cancer than the general public, though less so than women with hereditary cancer.