Breaking Medical News Archive
Meat Raises Colon Cancer Risk
posted 01/12/05
A report in tomorrow’s Journal of the American Medical
Association confirms the findings of earlier studies linking
meat consumption to colon cancer. In the Cancer Prevention Study
II, involving 148,610 adults followed since 1982, the group with
the highest meat intake had approximately 50 percent higher colon cancer
risk, compared with those with lower intakes.
The study found no relationship between white meat and colon cancer
among men and found a negative relationship in women. The study
did not report results for vegetarians within the cohort. Such data
are of interest because earlier studies have indicated that those
consuming white meat, particularly chicken, have approximately a
threefold higher colon cancer risk compared with vegetarians.
Editorial comment:
We hope that the study’s sponsor, the American Cancer Society,
will be encouraged by these findings to discontinue its beef-promoting
Cattle Barons’ Ball fundraisers, held annually in cities throughout
the U.S.
Chao A, Thun MJ, Connell CJ, et al. Meat consumption and risk of
colorectal cancer. JAMA 2005;293:172-82.
Fraser GE. Associations between diet and cancer, ischemic heart
disease, and all-cause mortality in non-Hispanic white California
Seventh-day Adventists. Am J Clin Nutr 1999;70(suppl):532S-8S.
For information about nutrition and health, please visit www.CancerProject.org,
AtkinsDietAlert.org.
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