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The Financial Express

Sausages linked to breast cancer, scientists find

| Updated: October 11, 2018 15:01:44


Sausages linked to breast cancer, scientists find

Regularly eating foods like sausages and bacon may raise the risk of breast cancer, according to researchers.

A review of studies found women who ate high levels of processed meat had a 9.0 per cent increased risk of the cancer compared with those who ate little of it, reports BBC.

The study backs up previous findings of the World Health Organization, which says processed meats cause cancer.

Experts recommend caution about the findings and say the actual risk for individual women is "very small".

This review, which included data on more than a million women, shows a link between processed meat consumption and breast cancer risk, but it's not clear if the food is actually causing this.

There are also other pitfalls to consider.

The 15 studies used in the analysis had different definitions of the highest consumptions.

For example, one of the UK studies in the review classed high consumption as more than 9g a day - the equivalent of just two or three rashers a week - while in others it was much higher.

The researchers in the majority of these studies noted what people said they ate and followed them up to see which of them developed breast cancer.

But the problem with this is that people who eat different amounts of processed meat may also have other behaviours that might explain the differences in breast cancer risk, such as being more or less healthy in other ways.

In the UK about 14 out of every 100 women will get breast cancer at some point in their lives.

That means a 9.0 per cent increase in risk in this population would be expected to translate into roughly one extra case of cancer in every 100 women.

Cancer Research UK estimates that about 23 per cent of breast cancers are preventable.

It estimates that about 8.0 per cent of cases are caused by being overweight and obese and another 8.0 per cent by alcohol.

Authors of this study, published in the International Journal of Cancer, say the link they found is only for processed meat, not red meat. 

The WHO lists processed meat as carcinogenic, primarily because of evidence linking it to a raised risk of bowel cancer, while it says red meat is "probably carcinogenic".

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