National Cancer Institute workshop dismisses abortion/breast cancer link

By Pat Centner, AFAJ staff writer

May 2003 – “Disappointed, but not surprised,” is how Joel Brind, Ph.D., described his reaction to the outcome of the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI) February workshop. Researchers at the workshop concluded that scientific evidence does not support the premise that having an abortion increases a woman’s risk of breast cancer in subsequent years.  In addition, the NCI’s Board of Scientific Advisors and Board of Scientific Counselors reviewed the workshop’s findings and unanimously approved them.  

Entitled “Early Reproductive Events and Breast Cancer,” the workshop was purportedly held to present and review the information available on the risk of breast cancer associated with pregnancy.  However, Dr. Brind, who is president of the Breast Cancer Prevention Institute and an endocrinologist at Baruch College of The City University of New York, says, “What we supposedly set out to do, we did not do, and that was to rigorously scrutinize and discuss the data.”  

Brind says he had hoped there would be in-depth discussion on both sides of the issue of induced abortion, the most controversial “reproductive event” connected to pregnancy. He thought workshop participants would address the wealth of research that shows an increase in breast cancer cases among women who have had an abortion – commonly called the “ABC” link.  

Indeed, institute director Andrew von Eschenbach said the decision to hold the workshop was made after an NCI Web site Fact Sheet which stated there is no evidence that abortion raises breast cancer risk had been challenged numerous times, and after he learned that the data had not been reviewed by scientists outside the institute.  

But Brind said there was, unfortunately, “no discussion, really, of the merits of any preceding data. I asked a couple of questions, but that was it. Nobody else was interested in discussing the merits or demerits of previous research. The answer I got when I asked,  ‘How can you do this (conclude that abortion poses no breast cancer risk) despite all the data going the other way?’ was, ‘There’s widespread agreement that [it] is true” that previous research is flawed. 

“So you ask a scientific question, you get a political answer,” says Brind. ... The only thing that really surprised me was the sheer bluntness of this political assault. It was very clear they were going to do whatever it took to stamp out the abortion/breast cancer link once and for all from the public’s mind. ... It was all just a very big fix.”

The general consensus among those who support an ABC link is that scientists denounce the supporting research because a large part of the funding for their grants and research projects comes from the NCI. And the NCI is funded by the government, which also funds Planned Parenthood, the largest abortion provider nationwide. 

Research showing an increased risk for breast cancer was deemed “flawed” at the workshop because of alleged “recall” or “reporting” bias. This phenomenon, according to Karen Malec, president of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer, theorizes that breast cancer patients are more likely to honestly report any abortions they might have had than healthy women are (i.e., a bias between breast cancer patients and healthy women). 

Malec says it all boils down to whether or not it is true that one group of women was more prone to lie about their abortion histories than the other. And the scientists say the healthy women in the previous studies were more prone to lie. The only logical conclusion? Individuals who are interviewed for scientific studies cannot be trusted to tell the truth.

“If there is such a thing as recall bias,” Malec says, “then thousands of studies paid for by U.S. taxpayers are going to have to be thrown out the window, along with the abortion/breast cancer research. This is because scientists rely on interviews very heavily to do their research. And they rely on interviews for stigmatized risk factors, such as the increased risk of cervical cancer, which is associated with having multiple sex partners, or the increased risk of liver cancer, which is associated with alcoholism. So if all the studies showing an increase in breast cancer for women having an abortion are flawed because of recall bias, then so is all the other taxpayer-funded research.”  undefined

For more information on the abortion/breast cancer link:

AFA Journal, 6/02 
Breast Cancer Prevention Institute www.bcpinstitute.org
Dr. Chris Kahlenborn’s Web site –  www.polycarp.org