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Drinking Increases Cancer Risk, Canadian Study Finds
August 5, 2009

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Research Summary

Drinking beer, wine or liquor raises the risk of developing certain types of cancer, according to a study of male drinkers and nondrinkers in Montreal.

The Los Angeles Times reported Aug. 3 that researchers compared cancer prevalence in a group of more than 3,000 male drinkers to a control group of about 500 nondrinkers. They found that men who were daily drinkers had three times the rate of esophageal cancer as those who consumed less than one drink per week; daily drinkers also were three times more likely to develop liver cancer, twice as likely to get pancreatic cancer, and 66 percent more likely to have rectal cancer.

Even moderate drinkers were 67 percent more likely to get stomach cancer than nondrinkers. However, the heaviest drinkers were at the highest risk of cancer, the research showed.

"For the most part we showed that light drinkers were less affected or not affected at all," said lead author Andrea Benedetti of McGill University. "It is people who drink every day or multiple times a day who are at risk."

The study was slated to be published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology.

This article summarizes an external report or press release on research published in a scientific journal. When available, links to the sources are provided above.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Rebecca on 06 Aug 09 11:05 PM EDT
Aren't these the exact same diseases they have been blaming on smoking, second hand smoke and obesity? I am beginning to think that nobody knows anything.

Posted by marleneb on 07 Aug 09 12:54 AM EDT
So, you use 3,000 drinkers and only 500 non-drinkers and call this a true result? Such nonsense. I can see ichoosefreedom has let the cat out of the bag! That should be on the front page of every news media, and these non-profits should lose all non-profit tax exempt status!

Posted by Jenn on 07 Aug 09 09:53 AM EDT
marleneb, the 2500 drinkers may have been split into groups of 500 (daily drinkers, occasional drinkers, etc.). I'm not saying it's balanced, but you see this in research quite often.

Posted by somebodyknowsomething on 07 Aug 09 01:30 PM EDT
Rebecca- this non-profit research seems to be offering people a choice. You could get cancer and die from being an obese smoker or an obese person that hangs out around smokers, from drinking, or fro being a fat drunken smoker. You can call the research bull. Live your life how you want. Let me know what option you choose and how it works out for ya.

Posted by myrtle on 12 Aug 09 08:13 AM EDT
I believe this peice of research becasue I have experienced it in my personal life. A father who was a daily beer drinker died at age 54 from espohageal cancer. A brother who is a daily beer drinker recently went through a grueling experience with rectal cancer... surgery, chemo and radiation. Sadly he does not believe the research because he continues to drink beer daily. What he believes is everything else abut life except drinking caused his cancer. Denial is powerful.

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