Showing posts with label talc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label talc. Show all posts

Monday, February 29, 2016

In the News: Talc

Last week we learned that a Missouri jury awarded the family Jacqueline Fox $10 million of actual damages and $62 million of punitive damages.  The information spread rapidly among Ovarian Cancer survivors. Many posted how they used the product for years. Some shared the information they found presented at the trial such as this letter  which discusses industrial exposure.

After reading so many responses to posts about the lawsuit award in social media and having questions myself (Shouldn't the number of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer be higher if Talc caused the disease? How does the talc affect the ovary to cause cancer? How does the talc affect the ovary when it inside the body not a surface organ?)

I delved further.

Study 1: Perineal Talc Use and Ovarian Cancer :A Critical Review

One of the thorough reviews of talc and ovarian cancer I ran across was this article published in 2008 by Muscat - Perineal Talc Use and Ovarian Cancer :A Critical Review.  (Perineal = cosmetic talc)

In the early 1970's the lung cancer asbestos link was being studied. One  asbestos study using guinea pigs  (1969) showed asbestos in the animal's ovaries.  While limited data in another study showed an increase in mortality rates due to Ovarian cancer for women who worked in the asbestos industry in another study ( 1982) showed. So talc became suspect as a cause of ovarian cancer. Please not that a study done in 2008 showed no increase risk for those working in the asbestos industry.

Is Talc the same as Asbestos? "Asbestos is morphologically (form and structure) distinct from talc and belongs to different silicate mineral groups and subgroups." In other words, Talc which is a member of a different silica group does not behave the same ("a mineral’s fibrous pattern of growth") as asbestos.Thinking along these lines carbon is the same in coal and a diamond it is all how the atoms are arranged.

How does Talc cause cancer?" "Asbestos fibers in the lung initiate an inflammatory and scarring process, and it has been proposed that ground talc, as a foreign body, might initiate an inflammatory response." We are not sure of the bodies response to talc although the formation of ANTI-MUC1 antibodies when the body has been exposed to talc has been proposed in the past.

How does Talc enter the ovaries?"Perhaps the most fundamental unanswered question on perineal dusting is whether powder applied to skin surfaces surrounding the external genitalia actually enter the adult female genital tract. It is uncertain whether dusting contaminates the vagina or cervix and if so under what hygienic conditions. The issue of particle retrograde migration from the cervix to the ovaries assumes that talc particles migrate upwards against both gravity and the downward flow of vaginal mucous and menstrual fluids." ..."In early studies, it was assumed that the vagina was the route of exposure, although as noted previously occupational studies indicated that inhaled particles could migrate from the lungs to the ovaries."
A study of silica in ovaries by Heller showed "Some samples that had no measurable talc counts were obtained from women who reported regular talc dusting, whereas other samples with high concentrations were obtained from women who reported no genital talc use."

The conclusion section of the Muscat study, states,  "lifetime whole body exposure experiments in female laboratory rats found that ovarian tissue was not contaminated with talc and that ovarian tumor incidence was not increased (Boorman and Seely, 1995). "...  "In addition, inhaled talc in mining and milling operations is not associated with increased pulmonary tumors. IARC classified inhaled talc that does not contain asbestos fibers as a group 3 carcinogen (e.g. inadequate evidence in humans), and the likelihood that talc could selectively induce ovarian cancer and not lung cancer, and at exposure concentrations presumably orders of magnitude lower than that in occupational settings needs to be weighed."

Study 2: Perineal Powder Use and Ovarian Cancer

The second study I read was Perineal Powder Use and Ovarian Cancer by Houghton and others published in 2014. This study looked retrospectively at data from the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study cohort. The women self-reported talc use (genitals, sanitary napkins, or diaphragms) and duration of use. There were over 61,000 women in the study. 

The authors concluded  "Ever use of perineal powder was not associated with risk of ovarian cancer compared with never use. Individually, ever use of powder on the genitals, sanitary napkins or diaphragms was not associated with risk of ovarian cancer compared with never use, nor were there associations with increasing durations of use." 

So where do we go from here?  Is there an increase risk of ovarian cancer?

Audra Moran, President and CEO of Ovarian Cancer Research Fund Alliance said  "The fact remains that the science is inconclusive about increased risk of ovarian cancer to women using talcum powder." 

 Dee

Every Day is a Blessing!

Sunday, September 6, 2015

What Are the Risk Factors For Ovarian Cancer

--> Before I list the risk factors for ovarian cancer it is important to know that having a risk factor does not mean you will get the disease. But there are some factors that have been found to increase the likelihood that a women will develop the epithelial ovarian cancer ( the most common type). 

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The average woman’s risk for ovarian cancer in her lifetime is 
1 in 75.

Risk Factors:

Age: The average age of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer is 63 years.

Obesity: Studies have shown a relationship between obesity and ovarian cancer (BMI  of 30)

Reproductive History: Never being pregnant

Estrogen Therapy: Studies show that taking estrogen 5-10 years have an increased risk

Male Hormones: Studies show that women who take male hormones are at a higher risk for Ovarian cancer.

Personal History: Women who have had breast , uterine, colon or rectal cancer have an increase risk for ovarian cancer.

Family History:A family history of breast, ovarian, colorectal cancer ( BRCA1and BRCA2 gene mutations, Lynch syndrome, hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer)  
PTEN Syndrome: Women with the inherited mutation of the PTEN gene have an increased risk of ovarian cancer. Also known as Cowden disease .

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Fertility Drugs: Some studies showed that the use of fertility drug Clomid , increased a woman’s risk for ovarian cancer.

Talc: Women who use talcum powder in the genital area have an increase risk. Please note that since the 70’s talc powder products must be asbestos-free. 





Dee
Every Day is a Blessing ! 

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Talc and Ovarian Cancer

"Perineal talc and ovarian cancer : a clinical review"

This article was written by Penn State College of Medicine professors. Over the past 25 years a number of studies were done to see if there was a link between talc, a silicate compound, and Ovarian Cancer. (I can remember when I was young putting lots of talc on a big soft pink powder puff and using it after a nice warm bath.) Anyway, a review of all the studies concluded "Talc is not genotoxic." and "These data collectively do not indicate that cosmetic talc causes ovarian cancer".
Since asbestos another silicate compound is connected to other types of cancer it was thought that use of talc in the 1950's could cause OC.
(European Journal of Cancer Prevention)

So one more thing we can cross of the list list as contributing to OC.

Thanks to the ACOR listserv for info on this study.
Dee
LiveStrong!