From foodconsumer.org
Acrylamide Study Suggests Breast Cancer Link
By Carol Potera
Apr 19, 2008 - 4:01:16 PM
The International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies
acrylamide as a probable human carcinogen. It has only been in recent
months that an epidemiologic study first found a link between dietary
acrylamide and human cancer risk. Now Danish researchers report that
acrylamide adduct levels in blood are associated with an increased risk
of breast cancer in postmenopausal women.
The idea that hard water—particularly that with higher magnesium
concentrations—helps ward off cardiovascular problems has been around
for 50 years. However, due to the ecologic nature of most studies,
uncontrolled confounding factors, and the different variables and
outcomes measured, no firm conclusions have ever been drawn. The WHO is
therefore coordinating worldwide efforts to compare cardiovascular
morbidity before and after changes in the calcium/magnesium content of
water supplies.
This is the first epidemiologic study to use blood biomarkers to
assess acrylamide exposure. The findings, says first author Pelle
Thonning Olesen, emphasize the importance of using biomarkers for
exposure assessment. "Biomarkers are a more trustworthy indicator for
exposure," he says.
Before 2002, people were known to be exposed to
acrylamide in certain industries and through smoking tobacco. That
year, the Swedish National Food Administration discovered that
acrylamide also forms in fried or baked starchy foods such as french
fries, coffee, and baked goods. Diet is now thought to be the major
source of exposure among nonsmokers, but the cancer risk posed by
acrylamide in food is unknown.
All previous epidemiologic trials estimated
acrylamide consumption from food frequency questionnaires. Olesen, a
toxicologist at the Technical University of Denmark, Søborg, and
colleagues instead measured levels of acrylamide and a key metabolite,
glycidamide, bound to hemoglobin. The subjects included 374
postmenopausal women with breast cancer and 374 controls who
participated in the Danish Cancer Society's Diet, Cancer, and Health
Study.
Adduct levels of acrylamide among smokers reflect
both dietary and smoking intake of the compound. After statistical
adjustments for smoking behavior, women with the highest
acrylamide-hemoglobin levels showed a 2.7 times higher risk of estrogen
receptor–positive breast cancer compared with women with the lowest
acrylamide-hemoglobin levels. The risk rose with increasing acrylamide
exposure.
Acrylamide-hemoglobin levels were not linked to
estrogen receptor–negative breast cancer, and glycidamide-hemoglobin
levels showed no connection with any breast cancer. The finding that
only acrylamide-hemoglobin was associated with breast cancer suggests
that the compound may induce cancer by nongenotoxic routes such as
alkylation of proteins that could alter estrogen receptor function. The
findings were reported in the 1 May 2008 issue of the
International Journal of Cancer.
"This is an important study because it's the first to measure
acrylamide adducts," says epidemiologist Lorelei Mucci, an assistant
professor at the Harvard School of Public Health. Nonetheless, the
study should be repeated in larger numbers of nonsmoking women,
according to Mucci, because more than half the cases and controls were
current or former smokers.
"The big public health question here is whether
the amount of acrylamide in foods is enough to lead to cancer," Mucci
says. It is possible that other chemical compounds formed along with
acrylamide may be the culprit in any cancer link.
"Acrylamide-hemoglobin may be a biomarker for other carcinogenic
chemicals formed during the heating of foods," cautions Olesen.
Originally published at http://www.ehponline.org/docs/2008/116-4/forum.html#acry