The relationship between alcohol and breast cancer is clear: drinking alcoholic beverages, including wine, beer, or liquor, is a risk factor for breast cancer, as well as some other forms of cancer.[1][2][3][4] Drinking alcohol causes more than 100,000 cases of breast cancer worldwide every year.[3] Globally, almost one in 10 cases of breast cancer is caused by women drinking alcoholic beverages.[3] Drinking alcoholic beverages is among the most common modifiable risk factors.[5]
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has declared that there is sufficient scientific evidence to classify alcoholic beverages a Group 1 carcinogen that causes breast cancer in women.[2] Group 1 carcinogens are the substances with the clearest scientific evidence that they cause cancer, such as smoking tobacco.
A woman drinking an average of two units of alcohol per day has 13% higher risk of developing breast cancer than a woman who drinks an average of one unit of alcohol per day.[6] Even light consumption of alcohol – one to three drinks per week – increases the risk of breast cancer.[3]
Heavy drinkers are also more likely to die from breast cancer than non-drinkers and light drinkers.[3][7] Also, the more alcohol a woman consumes, the more likely she is to be diagnosed with a recurrence after initial treatment.[7]
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