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Even moderate red meat eaters are at risk of bowel cancer

Embargoed until: Publicly released:

Even if your red meat intake is within official guidelines -– which is 500g cooked per week in New Zealand, and 455g in Australia – it may be putting you at increased risk of bowel cancer, Kiwi researchers have found. The study – based on 2609 cases of colorectal cancer in the UK – found those who ate an average of 76g of red and processed meat each day had a 20 per cent higher risk of the disease than those who ate 21g per day. Alcohol was also linked to an increased risk of bowel cancer, while fibre from bread and breakfast cereals was linked to a decreased risk.

Journal/conference: International Journal of Epidemiology

Organisation/s: University of Auckland, University of Oxford | World Health Organization

Funder: This work was supported by Girdlers’ New Zealand Health Research Council Fellowship [KEB], Cancer Research UK, the UK Medical Research Council, and the Wellcome Trust.

Media release

Moderate meat-eaters still at risk of bowel cancer

People who eat moderate amounts of red and processed meat are still at increased risk of bowel cancer, according to a major new stud.

‘Diet and colorectal cancer’, published today (Wednesday 17 April) in the International Journal of Epidemiology, also found that every bottle of beer or small glass of wine raises bowel cancer risk, while eating a lot of fibre from breads and breakfast cereals lowers it.

“Aotearoa New Zealand has one of the highest bowel cancer rates in the world; this study shows we could prevent some of these cancers by changing our diets, consuming less red and processed meat and alcohol, and more wholegrains,” says lead author Dr Kathryn Bradbury, a senior research fellow in the School of Population Health at the University of Auckland’s Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences.

“Think less beer and bacon, more bran and brown bread.”

There were 1,268 deaths from bowel cancer in 2016 (latest available data), making it the second leading cause of cancer death in New Zealand.

Dr Bradbury and co-authors Professor Tim Key, University of Oxford, and Dr Neil Murphy, International Agency for Research on Cancer, studied the diets of nearly half a million British women and men, aged 40 to 69 when the research began, over more than five years. During this time 2,609 of them developed bowel cancer.

They found that:

  • people eating around 76g of red and processed meat a day on average – barely a mouthful above the New Zealand-recommended upper limit of 71g daily average - had a 20 percent higher chance of developing bowel cancer than those who only ate about 21g a day
  • risk rose 19 percent with every 25g of processed meat (roughly equivalent to a rasher of bacon or slice of ham) people ate per day, and 18 percent with every 50g of red meat consumed (a thick slice of roast beef or the edible bit of a lamb chop)
  • each bottle of beer or small glass of wine raised bowel cancer risk by eight percent
  • people in the highest fifth for fibre intake from bread and breakfast cereals had a 14 percent lower risk of bowel cancer
  • no link was found between bowel cancer risk and fish, poultry, cheese, fruit, vegetables, tea and coffee

Current evidence points to an increased bowel cancer risk for every 50g of processed meat a person eats per day, but this research found that risk increases at just 25g per day, showing a similar rise in risk at smaller intervals. This is one of the largest single studies in the field and one of few to measure meat quantities and associated risks so precisely.

“There’s substantial evidence linking red and processed meat to bowel cancer, and the World Health Organization classifies processed meat as carcinogenic and red meat as probably carcinogenic,” says Dr Bradbury. “But most previous research looked at people in the 1990s or earlier, and diets have changed significantly since then. Our study gives a more up-to-date insight that is relevant to meat consumption today.”

Professor Key, deputy director at the University of Oxford’s cancer epidemiology unit and joint study funder Cancer Research UK’s expert in diet and cancer, says: “Our results strongly suggest that people who eat red and processed meat four or more times a week have a higher risk of developing bowel cancer than those who eat red and processed meat less than twice a week.”

The researchers drew on the UK Biobank study, a rich source of data open to all approved researchers, which is advancing understanding of how many illnesses develop. On joining the study, participants had various measurements and samples taken, and filled in a questionnaire that included a section on diet. The new study’s researchers linked this diet information to the cancer and death registries.

“We looked at whether the participants’ diets at the start of the study predicted whether they developed bowel cancer during the follow-up period. Although we used UK data, the results are relevant to New Zealand as we have broadly similar diets and the UK also has quite a high rate of bowel cancer,” says Dr Bradbury.

“You don’t have to cut out red and processed meat altogether, but this study shows that reducing how often and how much you eat meat, you have can reduce your risk of bowel cancer. You can try having meat free lunches, or days, and swapping red meat for chicken, fish or legumes.”

Dr Bradbury’s work was funded by a Girdlers’ fellowship she received from the Health Research Council.

Notes for editor:

New Zealand Eating and Activity Guidelines for cooked red meat: less than 500g per week (which works out at 71.4g on average per day); limit your intake of processed meats, such as luncheon, salami, ham, bacon and sausage. For fibre: 30g/day for men and 25g/day for women (Dr Kathryn Bradbury: “This is hard to achieve – in our latest nutrition survey from 2008/09 men consumed on average 22g of fibre a day and women consumed 18g). For alcohol: women should drink no more than two standard drinks a day and no more than 10 standard drinks each week. Women should drink no more than four standard drinks a day on any single occasion. Men should drink no more than three standard drinks a day and no more than 15 standard drinks each week. Men should drink no more than five standard drinks on any single occasion. Men and women should have at least 2 alcohol free days a week.

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