Would you change your lifestyle if you could slash your risk of getting cancer by a third or even half? That's the challenge posed by a huge new report just released in late February by The American Institute for Cancer Research that pulls together and analyzes the most comprehensive data on cancer prevention yet.
Okay, I admit it, you're not going to like some of this advice, and neither are your family members. I know I don't. Give up salami, one of my favorite lunch options? Yikes. And alcohol? As native Californians who grew up going wine tasting in the Napa Valley whenever possible, my siblings would be really sad if family dinners were no longer accompanied by a bottle of good zinfandel or pinot. And what's a burrito without a cold beer and lime to go with it?
But this evidence is so compelling that I think all of us in Cancer World are going to have to look twice at some of our lifestyle choices and may feel newly motivated to make changes, or nag at our loved ones to do so. Imagine, by following these guidelines, we could prevent:
(Translation: 49,000 people would not get colon cancer)
(Translation: 70,000 people would not get breast cancer)
This report is a big deal because the experts who compiled it looked at every major study and based their recommendations on hard evidence of what really works to reduce cancer risk. "This is the practical application of five years of work sorting through what the science really says," said panel member Steve Zeisel, M.D., of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Unfortunately for all those of us who like a drink now and then, there's convincing evidence that alcohol increases the risk of cancer of the mouth, pharynx, larynx, esophagus, and colon. This one got hit with a double-whammy of evidence this week; the National Cancer Institute also reported the results of a huge study detailing the risks of alcohol for women. Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, cancer blogger for the American Cancer Society, spelled it out in black and white: "there is no level of alcohol consumption that could be called safe." Scientists are still researching how alcohol causes cancer. One theory is that alcohol can directly damage DNA, increasing our risk of cancer. Research shows that alcohol is particularly harmful when combined with smoking.
One last thing; this report did not even address smoking, because experts consider that such a no-brainer at this point. Smokers increase their chances of getting almost all kinds of cancer every time they light up. So the only recommendation is, don't.
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