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OPB News, OCT. 8, 2007 (link)

OHSU Researchers Find Breast Cancer Risk Linked to Mother’s Hips

By Allison Frost

A new study suggests what would seem to be a bizarre of risk factor for breast cancer.

OHSU researchers found that women who were born to mothers with wide hips were 7 times more likely to develop breast cancer.

The reason is that women with wide hips apparently produce greater levels of estrogen. And that particularly affects a 10-week-old fetus.

Conventional wisdom had long held that women with small breasts and wide hips — also known as the pear shape — were less likely to develop breast cancer.

I asked researcher Dr. David Barker if these findings contradict that notion.

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OHSU’s David Barker speaking with us about the breast cancer paper he and his colleague Kent Thornburg had published Monday in the American Journal of Human Biology.