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Health: Greater adherence to lifestyle recommendations associated with lower cancer risk

11.27.23 | BMC (BioMed Central)

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Greater adherence to the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research (WCRF/AICR) cancer prevention recommendations — which encourage a healthy lifestyle — is associated with a lower risk of all cancers combined and some individual cancers such as breast cancer. The findings are published in BMC Medicine .

The 2018 WCRF/AICR cancer prevention recommendations aim to reduce the risk of cancer by encouraging individuals to maintain a healthy weight, be physically active, and eat a diet rich in wholegrains, vegetables, fruit, and beans, but low in highly processed foods, red and processed meat, sugar-sweetened drinks, and alcohol.

John Mathers and colleagues investigated the relationship between adherence to the WCRF/AICR recommendations and cancer risk by analysing UK Biobank data for 94,778 British adults, who were 56 years old on average. The researchers used self-reported dietary and physical activity data — in addition to participants’ body mass index and waist circumference measurements — to score participants’ adherence to the recommendations out of a maximum score of 7 points. They used cancer registry data to calculate the incidence of new cancers that developed over an average period of 8 years. They accounted for age, sex, socioeconomic deprivation, ethnicity, and smoking status in their analyses. The average recommendation adherence score was 3.8 points and 7,296 participants (8%) developed cancer during the study period.

The authors found that greater adherence to the WCRF/AICR recommendations was associated with a lower risk of all cancers combined, with each 1-point increase in recommendation adherence score associated with a 7% lower risk. Compared to those with an adherence scores of 3.5 points or less, those with a score of 4.5 points or above had a 16% lower risk of all cancers combined. They also found that each 1-point increase in adherence score was associated with a 10% lower risk of breast cancer, a 10% lower risk of colorectal cancer, an 18% lower risk of kidney cancer, a 16% lower risk of oesophageal cancer, a 22% lower risk of liver cancer, a 24% lower risk of ovarian cancer, and a 30% lower risk of gallbladder cancer.

The findings support compliance with the WCRF/AICR recommendations for cancer prevention in the UK, however the authors note that the observational nature of their study does not allow for conclusions about a causal relationship between WCRF/AICR recommendation adherence and cancer risk. The authors add that further research is needed to investigate which recommendations may be driving the observed association between recommendation adherence and cancer risk.

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Article details

Adherence to the 2018 World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF)/American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) Cancer Prevention Recommendations and risk of 14 lifestyle-related cancers in the UK Biobank prospective cohort study

DOI: 10.1186/s12916-023-03107-y

Corresponding Author:

John Mathers
Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
Email: john.mathers@newcastle.ac.uk

Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends): https://www.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12916-023-03107-y

BMC Medicine

10.1186/s12916-023-03107-y

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Deborah Kendall-Cheeseman
Springer Nature
deborah.kendall@springernature.com

How to Cite This Article

APA:
BMC (BioMed Central). (2023, November 27). Health: Greater adherence to lifestyle recommendations associated with lower cancer risk. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/147QMEO1/health-greater-adherence-to-lifestyle-recommendations-associated-with-lower-cancer-risk.html
MLA:
"Health: Greater adherence to lifestyle recommendations associated with lower cancer risk." Brightsurf News, Nov. 27 2023, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/147QMEO1/health-greater-adherence-to-lifestyle-recommendations-associated-with-lower-cancer-risk.html.