The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Almost half of cancer cases linked to obesity

- By Laura Donnelly HEALTH EDITOR in Venice

NEARLY half of all cancer cases are linked to obesity, research has found.

The study of more than four million adults, who were tracked for decades, found excess weight could be fuelling more than 30 types of the disease. Experts said the findings, which will be presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice, were “groundbrea­king”.

Health charities urged ministers to act on the “wake-up call”, with obesity already estimated to cost the country almost £100 billion a year, including £19 billion in NHS costs. Victoria Atkins, the Health Secretary, said the Government was taking “strong action” to tackle obesity, with a drive to harness technology to overhaul lifestyles expected this summer.

“I want us all to be able to lead longer, healthier lives,” she said.

The study, led by Lund University in Malmo, Sweden, involved 4.1million participan­ts who were monitored for about 40 years, with close monitoring of their weight and lifestyle. Over the period, 332,500 cancers were identified. In 40 per cent of cases, there appeared to be a link between excess weight and the developmen­t of cancer.

There are an average of 390,000 cancer diagnoses in the UK annually, meaning that around 150,000 of them could be linked to obesity.

In total, researcher­s identified 32 types of cancer with an obesity link.

Previously, internatio­nal research had identified 13 types of cancer which were linked to being overweight or obese, including bowel, breast, womb and kidney. The new study found that a five-point increase in body mass index (BMI) appeared to increase the risks of such cancers by 24 per cent for men and 12 per cent for women.

The same increase – enough to take someone from the threshold for healthy

weight to the cusp of obesity – was linked to 19 other cancers, with the risk raised by 17 per cent for men and 13 per cent for women. These cancers include malignant melanoma, gastric tumours, cancers of the small intestine and pituitary glands, as well as types of head and neck cancer, vulval and penis cancer.

In total, researcher­s examined 122 types and subtypes of cancer in a study which tracked patients over 100 million years of follow up.

“The findings of this study have important public health implicatio­ns. Establishe­d obesity related cancers accounted for 25 per cent of all cancer cases in this study, and the proportion increased to 40 per cent when potential obesity-related cancers were added. Therefore, a substantia­l proportion of cancers could potentiall­y be prevented by keeping a normal weight,” researcher­s said.

Obesity rates have almost doubled since the 1990s, with 26 per cent of adults in England now classed as obese, while 38 per cent are overweight.

Obesity has overtaken smoking as the leading cause of four major cancers, with smoking now the cause of one in five cases of cancer.

Forecasts from Cancer Research UK say that around 8,000 cancer cases in England could be avoided by 2040 if 10 per cent of those who are overweight and obese shift down one BMI category by 2030.

Prof Jason Halford, president of the European Associatio­n for the Study of Obesity (EASO) said: “This is a really strong, large-scale analysis. As always, more research is needed but it reveals what many studying the links between cancer and obesity have suspected; that obesity is likely to be a risk factor for many more types of cancer than we had evidence for before.”

Prof Halford, head of the School of Psychology at the University of Leeds, accused policy makers of a “clear failure” to take strong public measures to prevent obesity, while limiting treatment options.

“If this does not cause concern for health policy makers it is difficult to see what will,” he said.

The Health Secretary is expected to set out Government plans to help people overhaul unhealthy lifestyles in the summer, with a focus on the use of apps and new technology to monitor step counts and take more control of health.

The NHS is also piloting schemes to expand use of weight loss jabs such as Wegovy, which is the same medicine as the drug Ozempic which is used to treat Type 2 diabetes.

Ms Atkins said: “I want us all to lead longer, healthier lives. That starts with preventing illness through healthy lifestyle choices, like eating well, exercising regularly and not smoking.

“We are already introducin­g world-leading legislatio­n to protect future generation­s from the harmful effects of smoking to reduce illnesses like cancer, and we’re taking strong action to tackle obesity too.

“By investing in tech like the NHS Couch to 5k app, we are helping families all over the country get fit and active, and I am excited about the new treatments and technologi­es that can help people achieve – and maintain – a healthy weight.”

Katharine Jenner, director of the Obesity Health Alliance – a coalition of 50 health charities and organisati­ons, said: “The results are clear – if we can prevent obesity, we can prevent many types of diet-related cancers.

“This should be a wake-up call to the UK Government and government­s around the world, to urgently implement public health policies which will make a meaningful difference, such as restrictio­ns on junk food marketing, and levies on unhealthy food. We need to make the healthy choice the easy choice for everyone.”

Lead researcher Dr Ming Sun, from Lund University, said: “Our findings suggest that the impact of obesity on cancer might be greater than previously known, in that it is a risk factor for more cancers, especially of rarer kind. Some of these have rarely or never before been investigat­ed in relation to obesity.”

He said further investigat­ion to replicate the findings, and research the underlying biological mechanisms was warranted.

 ?? SOURCE: THE LANCET ??
SOURCE: THE LANCET

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