Dayton Daily News

Study: One sugary drink a day raises chance of liver cancer in women

- By Nancy Clanton

Consuming just one sugary drink a day can increase a woman’s chance of developing liver cancer, according to research by various institutio­ns that was presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Nutrition.

Researcher­s, including those from the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health and the University of South Carolina in Columbia, analyzed data from 90,504 postmenopa­usal women, ages 50-79, for nearly 19 years.

Subjects were part of the Women’s Health Initiative observatio­nal study and clinical trials excluding Dietary Modificati­on Trial participan­ts.

According to the data, women who had one sweetened drink each day were 73% more likely to develop liver cancer than women who had three or fewer such drinks in a month. Women who drank one or more sweet beverages daily had a 78% higher risk, the data showed.

Consuming sugary drinks has previously been linked to developing cardiovasc­ular and heart diseases.

Although soft drink consumptio­n in the United States dipped again for the 13th straight year in 2018, we still drank 38.87 gallons per person. The U.S. has some of the highest consumptio­n rates in the world, with over 50% of respondent­s of a recent internatio­nal survey stating that they consumed soft drinks at least multiple times in a week, if not every day, according to Statista.

“If our findings are confirmed, reducing sugar-sweetened beverage consumptio­n might serve as a public health strategy to reduce liver cancer burden,” Longgang Zhao, lead author of the study and doctoral candidate at the University of South Carolina, said in a press release.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? Consuming sugary drinks has previously been linked to developing cardiovasc­ular and heart diseases.
DREAMSTIME/TNS Consuming sugary drinks has previously been linked to developing cardiovasc­ular and heart diseases.

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