The Daily Telegraph

A drop of milk can help cool cancer risk

Study finds consuming drinks at above 60C is ‘consistent­ly associated’ with developing disease

- By Sarah Knapton Science editor

Adding cold milk to tea and coffee and waiting for hot drinks to cool could protect against oesophagea­l cancer, a study says. Scientists have found that regularly drinking hot beverages nearly doubles the risk of cancer of the gullet. Experts have advised people to allow beverages to cool.

ADDING cold milk to tea and coffee and waiting for hot drinks to cool could protect against oesophagea­l cancer, a study suggests.

Research has found that regularly swallowing hot drinks nearly doubles the risk of developing diseases of the gullet and researcher­s have advised people to allow beverages to cool. In 2016, the World Health Organisati­on first warned of the cancer risk associated with drinks above 65C.

Now a study of 50,000 people by the American Cancer Society has found that drinking 700ml per day of tea (around three cups) at 60C or higher appears to be “consistent­ly associated” with a 90 per cent increased risk of contractin­g the disease, compared with people who consumed drinks at lower temperatur­e.

Between 2004 and 2017, 317 new cases of oesophagea­l cancer were identified within the test group, with the chance of developing the disease far higher for people consuming hot drinks.

Dr Farhad Islami, lead author, said: “Many people enjoy drinking tea, coffee, or other hot beverages. But according to our report drinking very hot tea can increase the risk of oesophagea­l cancer. It is therefore advisable to wait until hot beverages cool down before drinking.”

The lifetime risk of getting oesophagea­l cancer in a man is 1 in 55. The new research suggests that would virtually double for men who drink very hot beverages.

The carcinogen­ic effect is likely to stem from repeated scalding of the food pipe, which damages cells. Alcohol and smoking have a similar impact on cells and can also cause oesophagea­l cancer.

Previous studies have found that smokers and drinkers who drink hot tea are more at risk of cancer of the gullet.

However, the study was carried out on people living in Iran, where tea and coffee is drunk far hotter than in Britain. An article published in the journal Burns in 2016 found that a cup of tea with 10ml of milk cooled to less than 65C in under five minutes. Allowing tea to cool to 60C is unlikely to affect the taste, according to research. The Royal Society of Chemistry also recommends drinking tea at 60-65 degrees, while Northumbri­a University found that the perfect drinking temperatur­e of tea – 60C – is achieved six minutes after preparatio­n.

Most coffee experts recommend that the drink be served at temperatur­es between 40 and 60C.

Georgina Hill, the 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.

“Not smoking, keeping a healthy weight and cutting down on alcohol will do much more to stack the odds in your favour.”

In 1991 The Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer linked the consumptio­n of coffee to bladder cancer, but following a lengthy review, found there was little to suggest a danger.

More recent research has found that coffee drinking had no carcinogen­ic effects on cancers of the pancreas, female breast and prostate.

The research was published in the Journal of Cancer.

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