Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 20, Issue 1 , Pages 121-143, March 2006

Environmental oestrogens, cosmetics and breast cancer

  • P.D. Darbre, BSc, PhD (Senior Lecturer in Oncology)

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +44 118 987 5123x7035/7025; fax: +44 118 931 0180.

School of Biological Sciences, The University of Reading, P.O. Box 228, Whiteknights, Reading RG6 6AJ, UK

The established role of oestrogen in the development and progression of breast cancer raises questions concerning a potential contribution from the many chemicals in the environment which can enter the human breast and which have oestrogenic activity. A range of organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls possess oestrogen-mimicking properties and have been measured in human breast adipose tissue and in human milk. These enter the breast from varied environmental contamination of food, water and air, and due to their lipophilic properties can accumulate in breast fat. However, it is emerging that the breast is also exposed to a range of oestrogenic chemicals applied as cosmetics to the underarm and breast area. These cosmetics are left on the skin in the appropriate area, allowing a more direct dermal absorption route for breast exposure to oestrogenic chemicals and allowing absorbed chemicals to escape systemic metabolism. This review considers evidence in support of a functional role for the combined interactions of cosmetic chemicals with environmental oestrogens, pharmacological oestrogens, phyto-oestrogens and physiological oestrogens in the rising incidence of breast cancer.

Key words: oestrogen, environmental oestrogen, cosmetics, breast cancer, xeno-oestrogen, DDT, PCB, parabens, aluminium, cyclosiloxane, triclosan, uv screen, phyto-oestrogen, breast cyst, endocrine therapy

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PII: S1521-690X(05)00074-6

doi:10.1016/j.beem.2005.09.007

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 20, Issue 1 , Pages 121-143, March 2006