Soft Drink Intake Linked to Pancreatic Cancer Risk
The February issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention published a paper showing a staggering 87% increase in the risk of developing pancreatic cancer associated with an intake of 2 or more sugary soft drinks per week. The group of scientists were careful to exclude other lifestyle risks such as smoking, caloric intake and type II diabetes to extrapolate this risk association.
The proposed mechanism is related to the increased surge of insulin – a known pancreatic cancer promoter after the consumption of sugar laden soft drinks. Fruit juice, another sweet beverage was also tested but the researchers did not find any link with increased risk for pancreatic cancer.
This may be due to the small group looked at for the study, additional nutrients found in juice as opposed to the sugary beverage and the fact that fruit juice is often consumed by people who follow a healthier lifestyle.
However, the study group are confident that the ingestion of the high sugar soft drinks play an independent role in the development of pancreatic cancer, one of the most aggressive and difficult to manage of all cancers.
The study examined the association between the consumption of soft drinks and juice and the risk for pancreatic cancer among Chinese people residing in Singapore. The data came from the Singapore Chinese Health Study (n = 60,524), and information regarding the consumption of soft drinks, juice, and other dietary items, along with lifestyle factors and environmental exposures, was collected at recruitment to the study. The participants were followed for up to 14 years.
At 14 years and a cumulative 648,387 person-years of follow-up, 140 incident pancreatic cancers developed in people who were cancer free at baseline. After adjustment for confounders such as BMI, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and fruit juice intake, the authors found that those consuming 2 or more soft drinks per week experienced a statistically significant increased risk for pancreatic cancer (hazard ratio [HR], 1.87; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10 - 3.15).
Comment
Whilst there are some inherent differences between the population studied and Europeans and North Americans, there is also much in common in terms of lifestyle, dietary selections and health care. This sobering data should provide added confidence to the recommendation that the consumption of sugar laden soft drinks is a significant health risk, beyond that of obesity and diabetes, and that it occurs at relatively low levels of intake. The periodic consumption of a sugary beverage may well be of little concern, but many people are drinking a few cans of their favourite beverage per day.
Mueller NT, Odegaard A, Anderson K, Yuan JM, Gross M, Koh WP, Pereira MA. Soft drink and juice consumption and risk of pancreatic cancer: the Singapore Chinese Health Study.Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2010 Feb;19(2):447-55. View Abstract
Related articles:
- Lifestyle Choices Impact Positively on Second Breast Cancer Risk
- An Herbal Extract Inhibits the Development of Pancreatic Cancer
- Green Tea Reduces Risk Of Gastric Cancer In Women Drinking > 5 Cups Per Day
- Minerals and Vitamins Reduce the Risk of Bladder Cancer
- Vegetarians Have Lower Cancer Risk
Keywords:cancer, Lifestyle, Pancreatic Cancer, prevention, Soda
If you found this post interesting, please share it, leave a comment or subscribe to the RSS feed and get future posts delivered to your feed reader.
Responses
One Response to “Soft Drink Intake Linked to Pancreatic Cancer Risk”
Leave Comment
You can ask technical questions, be as supportive, critical or controversial as you like, but please don't get personal or offensive, and do keep it brief. Your comments will be published only after verification.

The immune system is prone to the same grave misfortunes as any defense system handling weapons: collateral damage that comes with the destruction of the enemy on one’s own territory and friendly fire due to mistaken identity. Whereas the collateral damage is the price we pay for clearance of infections, autoimmunity is a pathological process. Nevertheless, the effector mechanisms involved in both processes are the same. Whether environment can be a cause, a trigger or an amplifier of an autoimmune disease are questions that are being intensively investigated.



Thanks Claire. A very timely reminder of the danger posed by the consumption of sugar.