Researchers say highly processed food may increase cancer risk

16-Feb-2018 - France

Eating more highly processed foods may increase the risk of cancer, a study by a group of mainly French researchers has suggested.

The researchers, mostly from Paris 13 University in the French capital, said that a 10-per-cent increase in the proportion of "ultra-processed foods" in the diet was associated with a "significant increase" of more than 10 per cent in the risk of cancer.

The ultra-processed foods they considered included soft drinks, mass-produced packaged bread and desserts, ready meals, instant noodles and soups, meatballs, and chicken and fish nuggets.

The study, published in British medical journal The BMJ, was carried out on 104,980 people who had enrolled online in a French research programme on links between diet and health.

The researchers warned that the results would have to be confirmed by further large-scale studies in different populations and settings.

According to a 2017 study using the same definition of ultra-processed foods, the average household availability of such foods in 19 European countries ranged from 10.2 per cent in Portugal and 13.4 per cent in Italy to highs of 46.2 per cent in Germany and 50.4 per cent in Britain.

That study, published in journal Public Health Nutrition, said there was a "significant positive association" between availability of such foods and obesity. (dpa)

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