Heavy drinking ups stomach cancer risk in men

November 1, 2011 in Cancer Prevention, Nutrition Topics in the News

Heavy drinking ups stomach cancer risk in men

Men who have more than four alcoholic drinks in a day may have a heightened risk of stomach cancer, a large European analysis suggests.

Previous studies that have looked at whether people's drinking habits are related to their risk of stomach cancer have reported mixed findings.

These latest findings, from a study of more than 500,000 European adults, suggest that heavy-drinking men are more likely to develop the cancer than light drinkers are.

At the start of the study, more than 10,000 men said they consumed, on average, more than four drinks per day. And their odds of developing stomach cancer over the next decade was double that those of light drinkers (half a drink per day or less).

When the researchers looked more closely at the type of alcohol people consumed, they found that beer, in particular -- versus wine or liquor -- seemed to be connected to stomach cancer risk.

There were no similar connections seen in women, according to the researchers from the Catalan Institute of Oncology in Barcelona, Spain. But there were also far fewer heavy drinkers among the female participants.

The findings, reported in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, do not prove that alcohol itself leads to stomach cancer in some men.

And the absolute risk for any one heavy drinker may be small. Of nearly 13,000 men and women who were heavy drinkers when they entered the study, just 33 developed stomach cancer over the follow-up period.

Still, experts already recommend that people who drink do so only in moderation. That generally means no more than two drinks per day for men and no more than one for women.

Heavy drinking is linked to cancers of the mouth and throat, as well as other serious conditions like scarring of the liver.

Smoking is one of the risk factors for stomach cancer. And in some past studies, it's been hard to separate the possible effects of heavy drinking on stomach cancer from those of smoking -- since the same people often have both habits.

In the current study, the team found that heavy drinking was linked to stomach cancer in men regardless of smoking habits.

The link also held when the researchers factored in people's diet habits and any infection with H. pylori -- a type of bacteria that contributes to ulcers.

While most people with H. pylori do not develop cancer, persistent infection is thought to raise the risk of stomach cancer in certain people.

If heavy drinking is a cause of stomach cancer, it may be related to one of the metabolic byproducts of alcohol -- called acetaldehyde. The substance is a known human carcinogen.

On top of that, beer contains compounds known as nitrosamines, which cause cancer in animals. So it's possible, the researchers speculate, that the combination of those substances and acetaldehyde could explain why beer, in particular, was tied to stomach cancer in this study.

SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, online October 12, 2011

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