Two Types of Risk Factors
Non-Modifiable (Fixed)
- Age and sex
- Genetics and family history
- Reproductive history
- Breast density
- Previous breast diagnoses
- Prior chest radiation
- Race and ethnicity
Modifiable (Can Be Influenced)
- Body weight
- Physical activity level
- Alcohol use
- Hormone therapy use
- Breastfeeding history
- Oral contraceptive use
Non-Modifiable Risk Factors
Breast cancer occurs nearly 100 times more often in women than in men. Women have far more breast tissue and are exposed to greater levels of estrogen and progesterone throughout their lives - both of which can fuel breast cancer cell growth.
Risk increases significantly as you get older. Two out of three invasive breast cancers are found in women aged 55 and older. The median age at diagnosis is 62. That said, about 9% of new cases are in women under 45.
Women with extremely dense breasts (BI-RADS Category D) have a risk 4–6 times higher than women with almost entirely fatty breasts. Dense tissue also makes mammograms harder to read - two separate concerns.
A woman who has had breast cancer in one breast has a 3–4 times greater risk of developing a new cancer in the opposite breast or in a different part of the same breast (not a recurrence - a new primary cancer).
Atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) and atypical lobular hyperplasia (ALH) raise risk approximately 4–5 times above average. Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) raises lifetime risk approximately 7–12 times and is a strong marker for future risk.
Longer lifetime exposure to estrogen is associated with higher risk: starting periods before age 12, reaching menopause after age 55, never having children, having a first child after age 30, and not breastfeeding.
Women who received radiation therapy to the chest (such as for Hodgkin's lymphoma) before age 30 have a significantly elevated risk later in life. Risk increases with higher doses and younger age at exposure.
White women have a slightly higher overall incidence of breast cancer. Black women have a higher rate before age 40 and are more likely to be diagnosed with aggressive triple-negative breast cancer. Ashkenazi Jewish women have a higher prevalence of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations (~1 in 40, vs. ~1 in 400 in the general population).
Modifiable Risk Factors
Alcohol is one of the best-established modifiable risk factors. Women who have 2–3 drinks per day have a risk approximately 20% higher than non-drinkers. The more alcohol consumed, the higher the risk.
After menopause, fat tissue becomes the primary source of estrogen in the body. Having more fat tissue raises estrogen levels, which can fuel estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancers. About one-third of breast cancer cases are attributable to factors women can change, with weight being a major contributor.
Regular physical activity is associated with lower breast cancer risk. Even modest activity - such as 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise per week - reduces breast cancer risk.
Combined estrogen-plus-progesterone HRT during or after menopause is associated with increased breast cancer risk, particularly with longer-term use. The risk diminishes after stopping HRT.
Current or recent use of hormonal birth control is associated with a small increase in breast cancer risk. The risk appears to return to average over time after stopping.
When Should You Talk to Your Doctor?
How Doctors Evaluate Risk
Personal history of biopsies, prior breast conditions, surgeries, radiation, and hormonal medications
Cancer diagnoses in first- and second-degree relatives, types of cancer, and ages at diagnosis
Validated tools (Gail/BCRAT, Tyrer-Cuzick/IBIS, Claus, BOADICEA) combine many factors to estimate 5-year and lifetime risk. A lifetime risk of 20% or higher typically qualifies a woman for supplemental MRI screening.
From your mammogram report (categories A through D)
Recommended when family history or clinical features suggest possible hereditary risk
What Happens Next
Frequently Asked Questions
If I have no family history of breast cancer, am I low risk?
Not necessarily. About 85% of women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history of it. While family history is an important risk factor, the majority of breast cancers occur in women with no affected relatives. Other factors - age, breast density, hormonal history, and lifestyle - also contribute to risk. This is why routine screening is recommended for all women starting at 40, regardless of family history.
Does a healthy lifestyle really make a difference?
Yes, meaningfully so. Research estimates that approximately one-third of breast cancers are attributable to modifiable lifestyle factors. Maintaining a healthy weight (especially after menopause), limiting alcohol to less than one drink per day, staying physically active, and limiting long-term hormone replacement therapy all measurably reduce breast cancer risk. No lifestyle choice eliminates risk entirely, but these changes matter.
My doctor says I have dense breasts. Does that mean I'm high risk?
Dense breasts raise your risk to some degree - women with extremely dense breasts have up to 4–6 times the risk of women with fatty breasts. However, dense breasts alone do not typically qualify you as "high risk" under the ≥20% lifetime threshold used to recommend supplemental MRI. Dense breasts may warrant supplemental ultrasound, and your overall risk picture - including family history and other factors - determines whether MRI is appropriate.
Related Topics
Have a breast imaging report? A board-certified radiologist with extensive experience in breast imaging reviews every explanation before it reaches you.
Get My Report Explained