Journal
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 254-258Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/01.ede.0000152525.21924.54
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- NIEHS NIH HHS [R21ES11659] Funding Source: Medline
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The global impact of breast cancer is large and growing. It seems clear that something about modem life is the culprit, yet there is thus far a lack of satisfactory explanations for most of the increases in risk as societies industrialize. Support has developed for a possible role of circadian disruption, particularly from an altered-lighted environment (such as light at night). Lighting during the night of sufficient intensity can disrupt circadian rhythms, including reduction of circulating melatonin levels and resetting of the circadian pacemaker of the suprachiasmatic nuclei. Reduced melatonin may increase breast cancer risk through several mechanisms, including increased estrogen production and altered estrogen receptor function. The genes that drive the circadian rhythm are emerging as central players in gene regulation throughout the organism, particularly for cell-cycle regulatory genes and the genes of apoptosis. Aspects of modem life that can disrupt circadian rhythms during the key developmental periods (eg, in utero and during adolescence) may be particularly harmful. Epiderniologic studies should consider gene and environment interactions such as circadian gene variants and shift work requirements on the job.
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