Can environmental and lifestyle factors
predict whether young girls will be at risk for breast cancer in the
future? That is what the Jersey Girl Study at The Cancer Institute of New
Jersey (CINJ) aims to find out, as it is being expanded to double the
participants in order to obtain a more comprehensive sample. CINJ is a
Center of Excellence of UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.
The goal of the Jersey Girl Study is to understand how puberty is affected
by environmental, hormonal and nutritional factors in nine- and
ten-year-old girls, who live in the Garden State. Research studies have
clearly identified puberty as a critical window in a woman's development
that has a major impact on her future risk of developing breast cancer.
According to a 2007 Breast Cancer Fund study, women who started their
period before age 12 have a 50 percent higher risk of developing breast
cancer, compared to those who started at age 16, an important finding
given that the average age at which girls in the United States reach
puberty has been declining.
Elisa Bandera, MD, an epidemiologist at CINJ and assistant professor of
epidemiology at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and UMDNJ-School
of Public Health, is conducting the study. She notes, "Since there is
growing evidence that early life factors have a significant impact on
breast cancer risk, it is critical that we have a better understanding of
what causes the early onset of puberty in young girls. We are hopeful to
use the data from this study to improve the health of this population, as
well as reducing their long-term risk of developing breast cancer."
According to the American Cancer Society, aside from skin cancer, breast
cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women. In 2008, there
were 183,000 new cases of breast cancer nationwide and 6,300 new cases in
New Jersey.
Healthy girls aged nine and ten are eligible to take part, although other
criteria must be met. Girls must live with their biological mother so
that personal and family history can be documented. Once eligibility is
determined, data will be collected on environmental exposures and
lifestyle factors including diet and physical activity. Body measurements
(including weight, height and body fat) and puberty scale are recorded,
and urine and saliva samples are collected. Data, which will be kept
completely confidential, will be collected initially over a two-hour
period, followed by annual ten-minute phone calls for two to four years.
More information on the Jersey Girl Study can be found by e-mailing
jerseygirlstudyumdnj or calling 732-235-9860.
The research study is a collaboration between CINJ, the Environmental and
Occupational Health Sciences Institute (jointly administered by
UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and Rutgers, The State University
of New Jersey), Robert Wood Johnson Medical School's Department of
Pediatric Endocrinology, UMDNJ-School of Public Health, and the New Jersey
Family Medicine Research Network.
As New Jersey's only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive
Cancer Center, CINJ offers patients access to treatment options not
available at other institutions within the state. CINJ currently enrolls
more than 1,000 patients on clinical trials, including approximately 15
percent of all new adult cancer patients and approximately 70 percent of
all pediatric cancer patients. Enrollment in these studies nationwide is
fewer than five percent of all adult cancer patients.
Source
The Cancer Institute of New Jersey
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