Products That May Reduce Your Risk of Breast Cancer
The right products may reduce your cancer risk
By Nora Isaacs
There is no proven link between breast cancer and household products, whether they be soap or water bottles. But many consumers, activists, and experts are concerned that a variety of goods contain hormone disruptors, chemicals that when absorbed into the body can mimic or interfere with hormones such as estrogen. Some researchers believe that chemicals with estrogenic characteristics can cause normal breast cells to divide.
“Each time they divide, they have the risk of copying DNA incorrectly and creating mutations in key genes, which may lead to increased breast cancer risk,” says Suzanne Snedeker, PhD, the associate director for translational research for the Program on Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Factors at Cornell University. Chemicals that mimic estrogen might also enable an existing breast tumor to keep growing, because most tumors depend on estrogen to grow.
Individual products contain only small amounts of these questionable chemicals, if they do at all. But there is growing concern about the ubiquity of such agents in cosmetics, household products, and certain plastics, which may cumulatively have an estrogenic effect. “We are not saying if you use a certain product with these ingredients it will cause breast cancer," Snedeker says. "But the science suggests your risk may be reduced if you avoid them." Here are a few ways to play it safe.
Next: Choose a safe shampoo
Credit: Getty Images
Popular Articles
- Breast Cancer Reconstruction Pictures: Before and After
- What's That Rash? A Visual Skin Guide
- 8 Natural Remedies That May Help You Sleep
- 10 Symptoms of Depression
- What is Mania in Bipolar Disorder?
- 20 Tasty Diabetic-Friendly Recipes
- 5 Fabulous Recipes for Healthy Fish Dishes
- 20 Recipes That Won't Raise Your Cholesterol
- 10 Easy Food Swaps Cut Cholesterol, Not Taste
- 7 Daily Habits That Can Halt Heartburn




