Abstract

BackgroundBreast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women worldwide and most cases are not due to high risk inherited genes. In response, breast cancer activists successfully advocated for innovative research on environmental chemical exposures as a possible cause. Since then, new evidence supports hypotheses that common industrial and consumer chemicals are linked to the disease, and expert panels recommend reducing exposures. We evaluated whether these research results and recommendations are translated back into the work of breast cancer organizations and what barriers and opportunities influence their ability to focus on environmental factors.MethodsWe used a Python script to evaluate the frequency of environmental terms on the websites of 81 breast cancer organizations (> 14,000 associated URLs) and conducted two focus groups and 20 interviews with leaders of breast cancer organizations. We also analyzed the frequency of terms on two trusted, national cancer websites.Results40% of organizations include information on environmental chemicals on their websites, but references are infrequent and rarely cite specific chemicals of concern. Most organizations (82%) discuss other risk factors such as exercise, diet, family history, or genetics. From interviews and focus groups, we identified four types of barriers to addressing environmental chemicals: 1) time and resource constraints, 2) limited knowledge of the state of the research and lack of access to experts, 3) difficulties with messaging, including concern that cultural and economic factors make it difficult for individuals to reduce their exposures, and 4) institutional obstacles, such as the downplaying of environmental risks by industry interests. Participants expressed the desire for easy-to-adopt educational programs and increased federal funding for scientist-advocate research partnerships.ConclusionOur research underscores the need for environmental breast cancer experts and trusted cancer organizations to increase research translation activities so that breast cancer organizations can communicate new science on environmental factors in their online and in-person work. Moreover, our research highlights how most groups are focusing on providing resources to diagnosed women, including addressing problems with healthcare access, which displaces their ability to work on breast cancer prevention.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women worldwide and most cases are not due to high risk inherited genes

  • Websites of breast cancer organizations have limited discussions of environmental factors, with more frequent mentions of lifestyle and genetic risk factors We analyzed terms on 14,087 URLs belonging to 81 breast cancer organizations

  • We found 31% of the organizations made a general mention of the environment (i.e., mentioned general terms such as “contamination” or “pollution,” rather than chemical-specific factors; please see Table 1 for terms categorized as “general environmental”), 40% mentioned a specific class of chemicals that may act as breast carcinogens or endocrine disrupting compounds, and 82% mentioned a risk factor not related to environmental exposures

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women worldwide and most cases are not due to high risk inherited genes. While research often emphasizes pharmaceutical and lifestylerelated factors as important for reducing risk, environmental exposures can be critical targets for breast cancer prevention. The importance of environmental chemicals as a target for breast cancer prevention is underscored in key expert reports, including the 2007 California Breast Cancer Research Program report Identifying Gaps In Breast Cancer Research [18], 2010 President’s Cancer Panel report Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What We Can Do [19], the 2012 Institute of Medicine report Breast Cancer and the Environment: A Life Course Approach [20], and the 2013 Interagency Breast Cancer and Environmental Research Coordinating Committee (IBCERCC) report Breast Cancer and the Environment: Prioritizing Prevention [21]

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