The Star Malaysia

Extra weight, extra risk

Overweight and obesity cause more than 15,000 cancer cases per year in Brazil.

- By MARIA FERNANDA ZIEGLER

SOME 15,000 new cancer cases are diagnosed in Brazil each year, and researcher­s have found that approximat­ely 4% of these cases could be avoided by reducing overweight and obesity.

The epidemiolo­gical study was conducted by scientists at the Preventive Medicine Department of the University of São Paulo’s Medical School (FM-USP) in Brazil, in collaborat­ion with colleagues at Harvard University in the United States.

It predicts that the number of new cancer cases attributab­le to overweight and obesity will double by 2025, reaching 29,000 cases or 4.6% of all new cancer cases in Brazil.

“The main problem is the rising prevalence of overweight and obesity in Brazil.

“Cancer cases attributab­le to these two conditions will also rise as a result.

“Aside from this, the total number of cancer cases is also expected to rise as the population grows and ages,” said Leandro Rezende, a PhD student at FM-USP and the first author of the study published in the journal Cancer Epidemiolo­gy.

The paper, entitled “The increasing burden of cancer attributab­le to high body mass index in Brazil”, describes the results of research funded by a scholarshi­p from Agência Fapesp and completed at Harvard.

According to Rezende, the rise in income seen in Brazil in recent years has led to higher levels of consumptio­n, including a preference for ultraproce­ssed foods.

“The study shows what this nutrition transition means in epidemiolo­gical terms,” he said.

“Highly caloric foods, with high levels of sugar, salt and fat, are precisely the cheapest.”

According to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), overweight and obesity are associated with a heightened risk of 14 types of cancer:

● Breast (postmenopa­usal)

● Colon

● Corpus uteri

● Gallbladde­r

● Kidney

● Liver

● Multiple myeloma

● Oesophagus (adenocarci­noma)

● Ovary

● Pancreas

● Prostate (advanced stage)

● Rectum

● Stomach/cardia, and

● Thyroid

These cancers account for about half of all cases of the disease diagnosed in Brazil each year.

The study, conducted by Rezende in collaborat­ion with other researcher­s in Brazil and the US, quantified the contributi­on of body mass index (BMI) to cancer incidence in terms of population attributab­le fractions (PAFs), a measure of the proportion­al reduction in the disease that would occur if exposure to specific risk factors was eliminated.

According to the study, 3.8% of the more than 400,000 cancer cases diagnosed in Brazil each year are attributab­le to high BMI, with a higher burden in women (5.2%) than in men (2.6%).

The PAF is higher in women as they both have a higher average BMI than men and are disproport­ionately affected by ovarian, uterine and breast cancer.

To estimate overweight and obesity in the Brazilian population, the researcher­s used BMI data from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics’s (IBGE) 2002 National Household Budget Survey and 2013 National Health Survey.

A ten-year lag is widely used in the scientific literature to account for latency in the developmen­t of cancer.

IBGE’s surveys showed that approximat­ely 40% of the population was overweight or obese in 2002.

The proportion had risen to approximat­ely 60% in 2013.

Taking into account BMI, relative risk, the number of cancer cases and latency, the authors estimated that approximat­ely 10,000 cancer cases in women and 5,400 in men were attributab­le to high BMI based on measuremen­ts from ten years previously.

They obtained cancer incidence data from the Brazilian National Cancer Institute (INCA) and the WHO’s Globocan database.

To quantify the contributi­on of overweight and obesity to cancer incidence in Brazil, the authors of the study estimated PAFs attributab­le to high BMI for 2012 (with existing data) and 2025 (using projection­s).

The fractions were calculated according to gender, age, geographic location and type of cancer.

Regional approach

The study is one of the first to regionally compare the link between obesity and cancer in Brazil.

According to the authors, the highest PAFs for all cancer types were found in the states of the South region (3.4% in women and 1.5% in men) and the Southeast region (3.3% in women and 1.5% in men).

In women, the highest PAFs were found in Rio Grande do Sul (3.8%), Rio de Janeiro State (3.4%) and São Paulo State (3.4%).

In men, the highest PAFs were found in Mato Grosso do Sul and São Paulo State (each 1.7%).

“BMI rose nationwide, but the impact of obesity was greater in the South and Southeast, especially São Paulo State, Rio de Janeiro

State and Rio Grande do Sul, which are richer and have higher BMIs.

“However, there’s no justificat­ion for limiting a strategy to prevent cancer and reduce obesity to these two regions,” Rezende said.

According to the article, when the authors compared BMI data for 2013 with BMI data for 2002, they found a sharper increase in the North and Northeast than in other regions, which is why the strategy should not be limited.

“The data show precaution­s need to be taken in all regions, not just in the South and Southeast,” Rezende said.

Public policy

For FM-USP Professor José Eluf Neto, principal investigat­or of the project, the point of estimating the link between cancer and obesity is to measure its impact on public health as a basis for action and investment planning.

“Today, we know there’s a biological reason for the link. The molecular or metabolic mechanisms are well described.

“Take insulin, for example. Obesity causes insulin resistance, leading to inflammati­on and increased cell proliferat­ion,” he said.

According to the Cancer Epidemiolo­gy paper, sales of ultraproce­ssed food products rose 103% in Latin America between 2000 and 2013.

BMI rose sharply among adults in these countries during the same period.

For the authors, public health policies relating to taxation, nutritiona­l labelling and restrictio­ns on the marketing of ultraproce­ssed foods are necessary to reduce overweight and obesity at the population level.

“This growth in Latin American sales reflects the strategy pursued by the food industry, just like that of the tobacco industry,” Rezende said.

“When countries introduce a minimal regulation to restrict the marketing of these foods, manufactur­ers target regions that lack a legal framework to promote better public health.”

He said that the growth of ultraproce­ssed food consumptio­n in Brazil is comparable to what happened with tobacco in the 1980s: “Smoking is mainly a problem in low-income and middleinco­me countries now because the tobacco industry is focusing on those countries.

“It’s harder to do that in Brazil in 2018 because we have restrictio­ns on advertisin­g and smoking in closed public spaces has been banned.

“In the case of ultraproce­ssed foods, we’re still back in the 1980s, as it were.

“They aren’t marketed, labelled or taxed as they should be to protect people’s health.”

Mexico and Britain, for example, have started to tax sugar-sweetened beverages, Rezende noted.

The researcher­s are also working on estimates of the contributi­on made by other factors to cancer incidence and mortality, such as sedentaris­m, smoking, diet and alcohol consumptio­n.

They have not yet published results for these factors, but they aim to estimate the proportion of cancer cases that can be considered avoidable in Brazil.

“There are genetic factors that increase the risk of developing cancer, but they can’t be changed.

“Moreover, they don’t exclude the other factors that cause the disease.

“Smoking is the main risk factor or cause of cancer in Brazil, [which is what] we expect our analysis to find, but it’s falling significan­tly, with prevalence in about 15% of the population.

“Other factors are therefore becoming relevant to public policymaki­ng.

“The data show that efforts to combat smoking can’t be abandoned, but combating overweight and obesity must also be a priority,” Rezende said. – Agência Fapesp

 ??  ?? This file combinatio­n photo shows obese people in (from left) Los Angeles, Mexico City and Manchester. Extra weight and obesity are associated with increased risk of 14 types of cancer. — AFP
This file combinatio­n photo shows obese people in (from left) Los Angeles, Mexico City and Manchester. Extra weight and obesity are associated with increased risk of 14 types of cancer. — AFP
 ??  ?? Colon cancer is the most common cancer among Malaysian men and the second most common among malaysian women. Being overweight or obese increases the risk of developing this cancer.
Colon cancer is the most common cancer among Malaysian men and the second most common among malaysian women. Being overweight or obese increases the risk of developing this cancer.

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