A historical cohort study with 27,754 individuals on the association between meat consumption and gastrointestinal tract and colorectal cancer incidence

Rachel Dankner*, Angela Chetrit, Sivan Ben Avraham, Nirit Agay, Ofra Kalter-Leibovici, Uri Goldbourt, Walid Saliba, Lital Keinan-Boker, Danit Shahar, Laurence S. Freedman

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In order to explore the association between meat consumption and gastrointestinal/colorectal cancer (CRC) risk and to estimate the Israeli population attributable fraction (PAF), we conducted a collaborative historical cohort study using the individual participant data of seven nutritional studies from the past 6 decades. We included healthy adult men and women who underwent a nutritional interview. Dietary assessment data, using food-frequency or 24-h recall questionnaires, were harmonized. The study file was linked to the National Cancer and death registries. Among 27,754 participants, 1216 (4.4%) were diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancers and 839 (3.0%) with CRC by the end of 2016. Using meta-analysis methods applied to Cox proportional hazard models (adjusted for daily energy intake, sex, age, ethnic origin, education and smoking),100 g/day increments in beef, red meat and poultry consumption, and 50 g/day increment in processed meat consumption were associated with hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals of 1.46 (1.06–2.02), 1.15 (0.87–1.52), 1.06 (0.89–1.26), and 0.93 (0.76–1.12), respectively, for CRC. Similar results were obtained for gastrointestinal cancer, although red meat consumption reached statistical significance (HR = 1.27; 95%CI: 1.02–1.58). The PAFs associated with a reduction to a maximum of 50 g/day in the consumption of red meat were 2.7% (95%CI: −1.9 to 12.0) and 5.2% (0.3–13.9) for CRC and gastrointestinal cancers, respectively. Reduction of beef consumption to a maximum of 50 g/day will result in a CRC PAF reduction of 7.5% (0.7%–24.3%). While beef consumption was associated with gastrointestinal/CRC excess risk, poultry consumption was not. A substantial part of processed meat consumption in Israel is processed poultry, perhaps explaining the lack of association with CRC.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2009-2020
Number of pages12
JournalInternational Journal of Cancer
Volume155
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2024

Funding

FundersFunder number
Fellowships Fund on Food and Nutrition and their Implications on Public Health
Office of the Chief Scientist, Ministry of Health3‐0000‐12858

    Keywords

    • collaborative analysis
    • colorectal cancer risk
    • gastrointestinal cancer risk
    • meta-analysis
    • population attributable fraction
    • poultry
    • processed meat
    • red meat

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