MAY 29, 2018

Obesity Directly Linked as a Risk Factor in 13 Cancers

WRITTEN BY: Mauri Brueggeman

The World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) has provided a global perspective report focusing on Diet, Nutrition, Physical Activity and Cancer.  The last report was published over a decade ago.  There are still components surrounding our knowledge of cancer that are maintained between then and now, but others have changed. 

Cancer claims one in six people worldwide.  Smoking is still considered the number one cause of cancer but there are other risk factors and this new report illuminates one of those causative pieces that, in my opinion, we have been reluctant to embrace and accept.  Obesity is not just a healthcare concern for disorders like diabetes, heart disease, osteoarthritis, and pulmonary challenges; obesity is a serious risk factor for cancer.  Fat cells can produce hormones that promote cell growth.  Rapid cell growth can lead to errors in cellular DNA and mutations can lead to cancerous cell types.  Now that growth drives cancer cell proliferation.  Sugars drive cancer growth by providing endless sources of energy to rapidly replicate and spread.  Chronic inflammation and insulin resistance can produce hormone signals that promote cell growth.  Again, if this pathway leads to mutated cells because the process is going too rapidly, now that mutated cell population is growing, dividing, and spreading.

It isn’t really just the state of being obese that is the causative agent.  It is a combination of factors that leads an individual to that state; therefore it is those combination of factors that contribute to the risk.  The WCRF report provides what they call a “blueprint”, or recommendations, for decreasing that risk of obesity and therefore, cancer.  The recommendations are as follows: being a healthy weight, being physically active, eating non-processed food (healthily), limiting fast foods, limiting red meat and processed meats, limiting intake of sugary drinks, limiting alcohol, and limiting supplements to make up for missing nutrients.  These individual pieces can be tailored to each individual based on their body composition, tendencies, and lifestyle so that they are do-able for nearly everyone. 

The WCRF report claims that nearly 40% of cancers are preventable.  The National Cancer Institute has linked 13 cancers to obesity:

These are not the only contributors for cancer risk; individual health factors including genetic makeup, family history, and more also add to the complexity of determining causation for disease states.  However, the worldwide supportive literature and recognition that cancer, albiet complex, has a likelihood of continuing to plague our populations and will lead to increased deaths if we don't take steps to make meaningful change.

Sources: National Cancer Institute, World Cancer Research Fund, Cancer Epidemiology, Recent Results in Cancer Research Journal, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Bioscience Report, Clinical Thyroidology, American Cancer Society,