A higher body mass  index (BMI) increases the risk of developing 10 of the most common  cancers, the largest study of its kind on BMI and cancer shows.
 UK researchers at the London School of Hygiene &Tropical Medicine  and the Farr Institute of Health Informatics estimate that over 12,000  cases of these 10 cancers each year are attributable to being overweight  or obese, and calculate that if average BMI in the population continues  to increase, there could be over 3500 extra cancers every year as a  result.
"The number of people who are overweight or obese is rapidly  increasing both in the UK and worldwide. It is well recognised that this  is likely to cause more diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Our  results show that if these trends continue, we can also expect to see  substantially more cancers as a result"*, said study leader Dr Krishnan  Bhaskaran, National Institute for Health Research Postdoctoral Fellow,  from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Using data from general practitioner records in the UK's Clinical  Practice Research Datalink (CPRD), the researchers identified 5·24  million individuals aged 16 and older who were cancer-free and had been  followed for an average of 7·5 years. The risk of developing 22 of the  most common cancers, which represent 90% of the cancers diagnosed in the  UK, was measured according to BMI after adjusting for individual  factors such as age, sex, smoking status, and socioeconomic status.
A total of 166 955 people developed one of the 22 cancers studied  over the follow-up period. BMI was associated with 17 out of the 22  specific types of cancer examined.
Each 5 kg/m² increase in BMI was clearly linked with higher risk of  cancers of the uterus (62% increase), gallbladder (31%), kidney (25%),  cervix (10%), thyroid (9%), and leukemia (9%). Higher BMI also increased  the overall risk of liver (19% increase), colon (10%), ovarian (9%),  and breast cancers (5%), but the effects on these cancers varied by  underlying BMI and by individual-level factors such as sex and  menopausal status. Even within normal BMI ranges, higher BMI was  associated with increased risk of some cancers.
There was some evidence that those with high BMI were at a slightly  reduced risk of prostate cancer and premenopausal breast cancer.
Dr Bhaskaran explained, "There was a lot of variation in the effects  of BMI on different cancers. For example, risk of cancer of the uterus  increased substantially at higher body mass index; for other cancers, we  saw more modest increases in risk, or no effect at all. For some  cancers like breast cancer occurring in younger women before the  menopause, there even seemed to be a lower risk at higher BMI. This  variation tells us that BMI must affect cancer risk through a number of  different processes, depending on the cancer type."
Based on the results, the researchers estimate that excess weight  could account for 41% of uterine and 10% or more of gallbladder, kidney,  liver, and colon cancers in the UK. They also estimate that a  population-wide 1 kg/m² increase in average BMI (roughly an extra 3 to 4  kg, or 8 to 10 pounds, per adult), which would occur every 12 years or  so based on recent trends, would result in an additional 3790 cases of  these 10 cancers in the UK each year.
Writing in a linked Comment, Dr Peter Campbell from the American  Cancer Society, Atlanta, USA, says, "We have sufficient evidence that  obesity is an important cause of unnecessary suffering and death from  many forms of cancer…More research is not needed to justify, or even  demand, policy changes aimed at curbing overweight and obesity. Some of  these policy strategies have been enumerated recently, all of which  focus on reducing caloric intake or increasing physical activity, and  include taxes on calorically dense, nutritionally sparse foods (eg,  sugar-sweetened beverages); subsidies for healthier foods, especially in  economically disadvantaged groups; agricultural policy changes; and  urban planning aimed at encouraging walking and other modes of physical  activity. Research strategies that identify population-wide or  community-based interventions and policies that effectively reduce  overweight and obesity should be particularly encouraged and supported.  Moreover, we need a political environment, and politicians with  sufficient courage, to implement such policies effectively.
- Krishnan Bhaskaran, Ian Douglas, Harriet Forbes, Isabel dos-Santos-Silva, David A Leon, Liam Smeeth. Body-mass index and risk of 22 specific cancers: a population-based cohort study of 5·24 million UK adults. The Lancet, 2014; DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60892-8
 
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