Researchers examined more than two decades of U.S. survey data on
eating habits and cancer diagnoses for 74,246 female nurses and
46,804 male health professionals. They sorted participants into five
groups based on how likely it was that their daily diets could
contribute to inflammation.
Compared to people with diets that had the least potential to cause
inflammation, individuals with diets that were most likely to cause
inflammation were 32 percent more likely to develop colorectal
cancer during the study, researchers report in JAMA Oncology.
“A dietary pattern that is associated with higher levels of
inflammation will chronically stimulate the bowels, leading to the
production of a constantly higher level of circulating inflammation
mediators that may contribute to the development of cancer,” said
lead study author Fred Tabung, a researcher at the Harvard T.H. Chan
School of Public Health and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
“Such a pro-inflammatory dietary pattern has a high intake of red
meat, processed meat, organ meat, refined grains, and sugary
beverages and a low intake of tea, coffee, dark yellow vegetables
and green leafy vegetables,” Tabung said by email.
Men with the most pro-inflammatory diets were 44 percent more likely
to develop colorectal cancer than men with diets that were least
likely to cause inflammation, the study found.
Women with the most pro-inflammatory diets were 22 percent more
likely to get colorectal tumors.
In both men and women, the connection between a pro-inflammatory
diet and colorectal cancer risk persisted across all anatomical
sites where these tumors can develop, except for the rectum for
women.
The risk of developing colorectal cancer was even higher among
overweight or obese men and lean women, and also among men and women
who didn’t consume alcohol.
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Some of the most important risk factors for colorectal cancer are
family history, personal history of polyps or cancer, certain
diseases such as ulcerative colitis, and not getting screened,
previous research has found. Not smoking, maintaining a normal
weight and taking aspirin are associated with a lower risk of colon
cancer.
Limitations of the current study include its reliance on survey
participants to accurately recall and report what they ate and
drank. The study also wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to
prove whether or how certain dietary habits might directly influence
the chances of developing colorectal cancer.
Even so, the findings offer fresh evidence that a typical Western
diet full of pro-inflammatory foods like meat and processed grains
and low in fruits and vegetables can lead to health problems, said
Ursula Schwab, a nutrition researcher at the University of Eastern
Finland in Kuopio who wasn’t involved in the study.
“This study adds to the previous evidence that a pro-inflammatory
diet is associated with several types of diseases, including cancer,
type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases,” Schwab said by email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ruvZzl JAMA Oncology, online January 18,
2018.
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