“I would be concerned about darker hair dye and hair straighteners,”
epidemiologist Tamarra James-Todd said after reviewing the report in
Carcinogenesis. “We should really think about using things in
moderation and really try to think about being more natural.
“Just because something is on the market does not necessarily mean
it’s safe for us,” she said in a phone interview. James-Todd, a
professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in
Boston, was not involved with the new research.
The study of 4,285 African-American and white women was the first to
find a significant increase in breast cancer risk among black women
who used dark shades of hair dye and white women who used chemical
relaxers.

Black women who reported using dark hair dye had a 51 percent
increased risk of breast cancer compared to black women who did not,
while white women who reported using chemical relaxers had a 74
percent increased risk of breast cancer, the study found.
The risk of breast cancer was even higher for white women who
regularly dyed their hair dark shades and also used chemical
relaxers, and it more than doubled for white dual users compared to
white women who used neither dark dye nor chemical straighteners.
The association between relaxers and breast cancer in white women
surprised lead author Adana Llanos, an epidemiologist at the Rutgers
School of Public Health in Piscataway, New Jersey, although she
worried enough about the safety of hair relaxers in African-American
women like herself to stop using them years ago.
“A lot of people have asked me if I’m telling women not to dye their
hair or not to use relaxers,” she said in a phone interview. “I’m
not saying that. What I think is really important is we need to be
more aware of the types of exposures in the products we use.”
The study included adult women from New York and New Jersey,
surveyed from 2002 through 2008, who had been diagnosed with breast
cancer, plus women of similar age and race but without a history of
cancer.
Women were asked if they had ever used permanent hair dye at least
twice a year for at least a year. They were also asked if they had
ever chemically relaxed or straightened their hair for at least a
year.
While the vast majority - 88 percent - of blacks had used chemicals
to relax their hair, only 5 percent of whites reported using
relaxers.

[to top of second column] |

For dark hair dye, the numbers flipped, though the differences were
not as dramatic. While 58 percent of whites said they regularly dyed
their hair dark shades, only 30 percent of blacks did.
The most striking results showed increased risk in the minority of
black women who used dark hair dye and white women who used chemical
relaxers.
Black women who used chemical straighteners and white women who used
dark hair dyes were also at higher risk for breast cancer, but that
might have been due to chance. James-Todd said that because so many
of the black women used chemical relaxers and so many of the white
women used dark hair dye, links would have been hard to detect.
There’s no reason to believe that chemical relaxers and hair dyes
would increase the risk for women of one race and not of another,
she said. She believes the association stems not from genetics but
from cultural norms.
It could also boil down to products, and women from different
cultures might use different straighteners and dyes. But the study
did not ask women to specify the products they used.
The study included the largest population of African-American women
thus far examined for breast cancer risk and dark hair dye,
according to the research team.
Previous studies have shown that long-term users of dark dyes have a
four-fold increased risk of fatal non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and fatal
multiple myeloma, the authors write. Prior research also has
associated dark hair dye use with an increased risk of bladder
cancer.

A 2016 report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention found that breast cancer rates are generally similar for
black and white women, at around 122 new cases for every 100,000
women per year, although black women with the disease are more
likely to die from it.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ujsWXd Carcinogenesis, online June 9, 2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |