However, in an interview with Metroxpress, an expert has rejected claims the same is true of the significant rise in the number of Danish women choosing to have both their breasts removed to avoid breast cancer.
READ MORE: Banishing taboos to munch their pills and be happy
The Jolie factor?
In 2011, just 34 Danish women chose to have a double mastectomy. By 2015, that number had risen to 189.
And during that period, the American actress Angelina Jolie chose to do the same thing, drawing worldwide attention in 2013 to how she was genetically predisposed to developing breast cancer.
About the odds
According to Anders B Bojesen from the Department of Clinical Genetics at Aarhus University Hospital, most of his patients with the same gene defect are unaware of Jolie’s story.
“Most do not know her story and are primarily concerned with reducing their odds of developing breast cancer from 50-80 percent to about 5-10 percent at the expense of losing both their breasts,” he told Metroxpress.
Speedy surgery shake-up
Like Jolie, the women in question were found to have defects in one of their BRCA genes: BRCA 1 and BRCA 2. Several thousand Danes are believed to have the defect.
The sudden rise, contends Bojesen, is because they are increasingly being offered the chance to have immediate surgery.
“We can expect the numbers to further increase,” he said.
“The offer to remove their breasts is one that is being more and more accepted in an attempt to reduce their risk.”