Update on the Abortion-Breast Cancer Link: Lessons Learned from Asia
By Joel Brind, Ph.D.
n 1996, I and my colleagues at Penn State Medical College published a
comprehensive review and meta-analysis of the peer-reviewed medical
literature on the connection between induced abortion and breast cancer
risk.[1] In that paper, we predicted that the U.S. would
experience tens of thousands of cases of breast cancer per year,
attributable to abortion, in the coming decades. While that has sadly
happened, since there are so many other risk factors at play, those
cases are just a small minority of the total.
However, if our data were correct, what about all the much larger
populations; the literally billions of women in Asia, especially in
China, where abortion has been mandatory for the second child and beyond
since 1980? In India and the rest of South Asia, where, unlike China,
government has not coerced abortion, abortion rates dwarf the American
statistics. Moreover, breast cancer has typically been relatively rare
in the developing world, including Asia.
Therefore, if we were right about abortions being a real, causal risk
factor for breast cancer back in 1996, now, over 20 years later, there
should be a virtual epidemic of breast cancer all over Asia at least,
with abortion being a main—if not the main—culprit. Sadly again, I must
report, that indeed is what has taken place.
As early as 2008, a major review in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute[2] (NCI)
concluded, “China is on the cusp of a breast cancer epidemic.”
Curiously, although the authors acknowledge, “the distribution of
reproductive and lifestyle risk factors for Chinese women is changing
rapidly,” they studiously avoid the word abortion (no surprise here
really, as the NCI officially declared the abortion-breast cancer link
[ABC link] nonexistent in 2003[3]). Now, a decade later, the evidence of the ABC link is exploding all over Asia.
In 2013, Hubei Huang et al. published a systematic review and
meta-analysis (SRMA) on abortion and breast cancer just in mainland
China.[9] In just over two decades (1988 – 2012), there were no less
than 36 individual studies on women in China. Huang et al. reporting a
statistically significant 44 percent increase in breast cancer risk for
women with one or more abortion, which went up to 76 percent for women
with two or more abortions, and up to 89 percent increased risk for
women with three or more abortions.
In 2018, colleagues at the Breast Cancer Prevention Institute
published a SRMA on the ABC link in women in South Asia: India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.[v] We found that in
South Asia alone, in just the past decade (2007-2017) there were no
fewer than 20 studies reporting data on this issue. The results were
striking. Not only were the results statistically significant, and did
the relative risk go up with the number of abortions, but the overall
risk increase for women with one or more abortions was 151 percent; several times higher than had been reported before anywhere in the world. Meaning,
the women in the study experienced a 1.5 times increased risk of
developing breast cancer after having had one or more abortions.
That unusually strong ABC link raises the obvious question: What is
different about South Asian women that makes them more vulnerable to the
cancer risk-increasing effect of abortion? The answer lies in the
meaning of the term “relative risk.” When we say that a woman’s risk
goes up 50 percent with abortion, we are comparing her to the typical,
average woman who has not had an abortion within that study population.
Of course, women who have not had any abortions can still get breast
cancer, as there are quite a number of risk factors.
Let us take, for example, a typical woman in the U.S. She has about a
10 percent lifetime risk of breast cancer in the absence of abortion.
Abortion raises that risk to about a 13 percent lifetime risk. In South
Asia, the typical woman is very different from the typical American
woman; not because of any genetic differences, but because of cultural
and lifestyle factors. Specifically, the typical South Asian woman
(especially in rural areas), gets married and starts having children
while still in her teens, she has lots of them and breastfeeds all of
them. Moreover, she does not drink and doesn’t smoke. All of these
things keep the risk of breast cancer down, to around a 2 percent
lifetime risk, on average—not 10 percent, as in the U.S.
So what is the effect of abortion? It is about the same as in the
U.S., that is, it adds about a 3 percent absolute risk to the lifetime
risk: It brings the 2 percent lifetime risk up to about a 5 percent
lifetime risk. As a relative term, it raises the 2 percent risk by
2.5-fold (150 percent), but in absolute terms, it’s the same 3 percent.
Another way to look at this statistic is to picture 200 average
American women, half of whom have not had an abortion and half of whom
have had an abortion. Of the former group, an average of 10 women will
get breast cancer sometime in their life, whereas in the latter group,
13 women will get breast cancer. Now if we look instead at South Asian
women, only about two of the women who had not experienced abortion
will get breast cancer in their lifetime, but about five of the
post-abortive women will get breast cancer; i.e., 3 percent more of
them. (But in relative terms, 5 percent is 150 percent more than 2
percent.)
So we can see that women are the same the world over, in terms of
what causes breast cancer, and it’s only about 3 percent of women who
get an abortion will get breast cancer because of it. At first, 3
percent doesn’t sound like much. But consider that in China and India
alone, there are about 1.4 billion women now alive. If about 30 percent
of them have an abortion at some point in their life that would be 420 million women. Three per cent of 420 million comes out to 12.6 million who
are likely to get breast cancer because of their abortions! Add to that
the fact the mortality rate for breast cancer in that part of the world
is close to 50 percent (in the U.S. it’s about 20 percent), and we’re
talking about over 6 million women now alive in China and India who can
be expected to die of breast cancer because they had an abortion!
Meanwhile, back in the States, the prestigious National Academy of
Science and Medicine has weighed on the safety of abortion. In its
recent policy publication: “The Safety and Quality of Abortion Care in
the United States,[6]” the authors “debunked” the ABC link,
relying on just three research papers. These three papers were old
(2000, 2001 and 2005), flawed, and fraudulent — i.e. willfully false and
misleading. I debunked them in the peer reviewed medical literature
many years ago:
Newcomb & Mandelson, 2000 (USA):
Newcomb et al. had previously published a study in which they
reported a 23 percent increased risk with abortion, with borderline
statistical significance.[7] A scientifically valid effort to
verify or nullify this finding in a subsequent study would require a
study population that would yield greater statistical power than the
prior study (i.e., a much larger study), yet the latter study was of
much lower statistical power. Apparently, this was because it gave them
the result they were looking for, so they could say that their “results
do not support a relation between induced abortion and breast cancer
incidence.[8]”
Goldacre et al., 2001 (England)[9]
Goldacre’s very large 2001 study was based on records for both
abortion and breast cancer from the British National Health Service
(NHS) database on residents of Oxford, UK, over a 30-year period (1968-
1998), so it appeared to provide a robust analysis. However, the
database showed that scarcely more than 1 percent of patients (300 out
of 28,616) had a record of induced abortion over the entire 30-year
period, whereas the recorded abortion rate for the whole UK exceeded 1
percent per year for that period. Hence, more than 90 percent of women
in the study who had had an abortion were misclassified as
abortion-negative. That’s because most abortions in England are not done
at NHS hospitals. Even the authors admitted that their “data on
abortion are substantially incomplete.” But even that is an
understatement: The study is worthless, even though the authors claimed,
fraudulently, that abortion “does not increase the risk of breast
cancer.”[10]
Brewster et al., 2005 (Scotland)[11]
The 2005 case-control study of Brewster et al. was nested in a
nationwide database of Scottish NHS records of reproductive history and
cancer diagnoses, and the authors present evidence to support their
claim that their data on induced abortion “seem likely to be reasonably
complete.” But inexplicably, the authors restricted the inclusion of
women with any pre-1981 reproductive history to “those with some
reproductive events occurring before 1981, and (for whom) number of
pregnancies equaled number of births—that is, no miscarriages or
induced abortions before 1981.” This arbitrary, unexplained and
illegitimate cherry picking of who was included in the study meant the
wholesale elimination of women for whom abortion preceded the first live
birth. It distorted the abortion statistics beyond recognition, but it
enabled the authors to come up a completely unsubstantiated and invalid
conclusion that abortion provides a slight protective effect against
breast cancer! The extreme bias in the study’s design and analysis,
render it worthless for meaningful conclusions.[12]
In the world of abortion research, fake science has prevailed among
the arbiters of public health information for almost 40 years, even as
the real devastation takes its toll around the world: Breast cancer is
now the leading cause of death of middle-aged women worldwide, in many
instances thanks to abortion.
~~~
Joel Brind, PhD, is a professor of biology and endocrinology at
Baruch College of the City University of New York, where he has been
teaching since 1986. He has been researching the abortion-breast cancer
link since 1992. This article was originally published on Care Net’s
Center Insights blog at care-net.org. Reprinted with permission.
References
1. Brind J, Chinchilli VM, Severs WB, Summy-Long J. Induced abortion
as an independent risk factor for breast cancer: a comprehensive review
and meta-analysis. J Epidemiol Community Health 1996;50:481-496.
2. Linos L, Spanos D, Rosner BA et al. Effects of Reproductive and
Demographic Changes on Breast Cancer Incidence in China: A Modeling
Analysis J Natl Cancer Inst 2008;100: 1352–60
3. National Cancer Institute. (2010, January 12). Abortion,
Miscarriage, and Breast Cancer Risk: 2003 Workshop. Retrieved May 14,
2019, from
https://www.cancer.gov/types/breast/abortion-miscarriage-risk#summary-report
4. Huang Y, Zhang X, Li W et al. A meta-analysis of the association
between induced abortion and breast cancer risk among Chinese females.
Cancer Causes Control 2014;25:227-36. doi:10.1007/s10552-013-0325-7 Epub
2013.
5. Brind J, Condly SJ, Lanfranchi A, Rooney, B. Induced abortion as
an independent risk factor for breast cancer: a systematic review and
meta-analysis of studies on South Asian women. Issues Law Med
2018;33-54.
6. Committee on Reproductive Health Services: The Safety and Quality
of Abortion Care in the United States. A Consensus Study Report of The
National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine. Washington
DC: The National Academies Press, 2018. Available at:
http://nap.edu/24950
7. Newcomb PA, Mandelson MT. A record-based evaluation of induced
abortion and breast cancer risk (United States). Cancer Causes Control
2000;11:777-781
8. Brind J. Induced Abortion as an Independent Risk Factor for
Breast Cancer: A Critical Review of Recent Studies Based on Prospective
Data. J Am Physicians Surgeons 2005;10:105-110.
9. Goldacre MJ, Kurina LM, Seagroatt V, Yeates D. Abortion and
breast cancer: a case-control record linkage study. J Epidemiol
Community Health 2001;55:336-337
10. Brind JL, Chinchilli VM. Letter: Abortion and breast cancer. J Epidemiol Community Health 2002;56:237-238
11. Brewster DH, Stockton DL, Dobbie R, et al Risk of breast cancer
after miscarriage or induced abortion: a Scottish record linkage
casecontrol study. 2005;59:283-287.
Learn More:
For the most extensive online library of published studies on the physical and psychological effects of abortion, visit
www.abortionrisks.org.