Talcum Powder and Possible link to Ovarian Cancer
By
DR. MUKTAR A. GADANYA, MBBS, MSc, FMCPH, MFR
Cumulative
medical researchers suggest that there is a link between use of talcum powder
for intimate feminine hygiene and development of ovarian cancer.
Even though
talcum powder is an essential item in many homes and nurseries across the
world, linkage between its use for female perineal hygiene and increased
ovarian cancer risk has being on the radar for decades.
In 1971, researchers
drew attention to a probable connection between the dusting of female perineum with
talcum powder and development of ovarian cancer. They postulated that talc powder
enters a woman’s body through the vagina and travels through the cervix to the
uterus, before finally reaching the ovaries, where it continuously irritate
them and cause cancer.
The world
reputable medical journal, The Lancelet, reported
that a majority of ovarian tumors had particles of talc intensely entrenched in
them.
The Lancet study was followed by a subsequent
research published in 1982 in the famous journal, Cancer, which provided important data linking the powder and
ovarian cancer. Since then, about 20 researches have showed similar findings.
Three years
ago, in June 2013, a study was published by the highly ranked journal Cancer Prevention Research. Their conclusion
was that there is risk increase of 20 and 30 percent for women who used talcum
powder for perineal hygiene. This research validated the results of an earlier
publication by the journal Anticancer
Research in 2003, which concluded that use of talcum powder on female
genitals increased risk of ovarian cancer by almost 30 percent. The authors
arrived at that conclusion after comparing data from 16 separate research works.
In 2013 a
woman in the United States who was diagnosed with ovarian cancer after 30 years
of using talcum powder, sued the manufacture and won the case based on a
decision of a jury.
Brief
information about the author
Dr. Muktar Gadanya MFR was awarded the
National Honour of Member of the Order of Federal Republic (MFR) at the age of
29 years. Muktar is a Fellow of the National Postgraduate Medical College of
Nigeria, where he won the prestigious Professor Adetokubo O. Lucas and Dr J.D
Soleye Prizes for the Best Graduating Fellow, and Best Public Health
Dissertation. He has the Masters degree (MSc) of University of London, United
Kingdom, in Reproductive and Sexual Health Research. He was trained on
Intervention Mapping for HIV Prevention at the University of Maastricht in the
Netherlands. He was the 2nd prize winner in The Higher Education
Academy Essay competition for postgraduate students in the United Kingdom in
2010. He is a Fellow of the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief (PEPFAR), and is a member of the International Consortium for Research
and Action against Health Related Stigma (ICRAaS). He has published in learned
peer-reviewed academic journals locally and internationally.
1 comment:
What an interesting abstract!
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