The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Daily hot drinks linked to greater risk of cancer

Study advises letting your tea cool down to reduce the risk of disease

- JANE KIRBY

Very hot drinks may be linked to a 90% higher risk of oesophagea­l cancer, a study of 50,000 people suggests.

Experts found that drinking 700ml per day of tea at 60C or higher was “consistent­ly associated” with a 90% increased risk of the disease, compared with people who consumed drinks at lower temperatur­es.

Published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Cancer, the study looked at the drinking habits of 50,045 people aged 40 to 75 who lived in north-eastern Iran.

During a follow-up period from 2004 to 2017, 317 new cases of oesophagea­l cancer – also known as cancer of the food pipe – were identified.

Lead author Dr Farhad Islami, from the American Cancer Society, said: “Many people enjoy drinking tea, coffee, or other hot beverages.

“However, according to our report, drinking very hot tea can increase the risk of oesophagea­l cancer, and it is therefore advisable to wait until hot beverages cool down before drinking.”

As long you’re letting your tea cool down a bit before you drink it, or adding cold milk, you’re unlikely to be raising your cancer risk

In 2016, the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer – the cancer agency of the World Health Organisati­on – classified drinking very hot beverages above 65C as a probable carcinogen.

The IARC examined studies that mostly looked at mate, a type of tea that is traditiona­lly drunk at very hot temperatur­es, mainly in South America, Asia, and Africa.

They said it was the temperatur­e rather than the type of drink that was associated with cancer.

The new study did not mention mate but examined tea.

The researcher­s behind the new study, including from the University of Cambridge, concluded: “Our results substantia­lly strengthen the existing evidence supporting an associatio­n between hot beverage drinking and (oesophagea­l cancer).”

Georgina Hill, health informatio­n officer at Cancer Research UK, said: “This study adds to the evidence that having drinks hotter than 60 degrees may increase the risk of oesophagea­l cancer, but most people in the UK don’t drink their tea at such high temperatur­es.

“As long you’re letting your tea cool down a bit before you drink it, or adding cold milk, you’re unlikely to be raising your cancer risk – and not smoking, keeping a healthy weight and cutting down on alcohol will do much more to stack the odds in your favour.”

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