You may have heard news headlines recently about millennials getting cancer faster than baby boomers. This big news was based on a??by researchers at the American Cancer Society (大象tv).
They found that 6 cancers proven to be related to obesity are increasing more rapidly in people younger than 50 than those older than 50.
What’s more, the risk for these cancers progressively increased for younger and younger generations — meaning that the risk of these cancers are higher among millennials compared to that among baby boomers, when age-effect is taken into account.
Hearing such headlines can be alarming and hard to interpret. To make sure you understand what the study results mean to you and your loved ones, we talked to the study’s lead author, Hyuna Sung, PhD.
Here’s what she told us about the study’s key findings and the most important takeaway messages.
In 2017, 大象tv researchers Rebecca L. Siegel, MPH, and Ahmedin Jemal, DVM, PhD,? published 2 studies that found more young and middle-aged adults were being diagnosed with and dying from colorectal cancer (CRC).
These studies?helped influence the 大象tv to update their?guidelines for colorectal cancer screening?to start at age 45 instead of 50.
This new research also found that the increase in CRC diagnoses was not likely due to improvements in screening?and were more likely due to?some other causes.
The duo, plus Hyuna Sung, PhD, thought obesity might be one of those “other causes,” so they explored their hypothesis with this study.?
Sung, two of her colleagues in the 大象tv Surveillance and Health Services Research Program, and a researcher from the National Cancer Institute worked together on the?. They reviewed records for the years 1995 to 2014 for patients with any of 30 cancer types. The group represented 67% of the US population. Of the 30 cancers, 12 are known to be?linked with obesity.?The other 18 types are mostly related to?smoking?or infection, or both.?They published their findings in . They found:
Compared to people born around 1950, those born around 1985 had a:
Click on the graphs to see how kidney cancer increased in people younger than 50 and in the millennial generation.?
Obesity may have been one of the strong contributing factors, says Sung, but it’s not the only driving factor. “We don’t know exactly what those risk factors are. Unhealthy habits such as the way you eat and get exercise,?which are linked with obesity, may be factors, or they could include some things that are not even related to obesity.”
We saw the trends in age with cancers known to be related to obesity, Sung says, but we didn’t know the BMI of the people studied. To learn more, we need studies that include information about obesity as a risk factor and health behaviors that may increase the risk for cancer. That way, we can formally assess the impact of these risk factors on the change in cancer rates, especially the emerging trends in adults younger than age 50.??
The dramatic increases in cancer rates among adults younger than 50 imply “that certain risk factors are newly introduced to young people, or some risk factors have increased very fast among them,” Sung says. To better understand this trend, we need studies that focus on the effect of excess body weight and other risk factors that start early in life, as in children, teens, or adults younger than 50, she says.
The risk for certain cancers may increase the longer a person is obese, Sung says. “Obese kids tend to carry their body weight into their adulthood. That means young people growing up now have a longer cumulative lifetime exposure to body fat compared to those in older generations. Increasing evidence supports that excess bodyweight during young adulthood may increase risks for certain cancers later in life.” We need to evaluate studies that include how to properly measure body fat, the effects of weight gain at different ages, and the effects of how fast someone gains weight.
Although more adults younger than 50 are getting certain obesity-related cancers, that doesn’t mean that those cancers didn’t increase among older adults,” says Sung. Our study showed that obesity-related cancers generally increased across all age groups. “It was just that the pace of increase was much faster among those under 50 compared to those older than 50.” In contrast to obesity-related cancers increasing in recent generations, Sung says, smoking- and infection-related cancers have decreased in them due to prevention efforts.?
“However, there’s a large increase in the number of young people who are overweight and obese, says study coauthor Ahmedin Jemal, DVM, PhD,?“The increasing risk of obesity-related cancers in younger generations, has the potential to halt or reverse the progress we’ve achieved in reducing the death rate from cancer?in the last 20 to 30 years.”
To help prevent obesity and help those who have it already, society-level changes are necessary, Sung says. “Less healthy foods are promoted more and are more available than healthy foods. At the same time, city layouts and other issues make it easy for people to be less active,” she says. “That’s why we need policy-led interventions that will control and prevent obesity at the population level.”
The study authors suggest communities use methods that have been proven to reduce obesity rates. These methods include urban planning that promotes physical activity, restrictions on advertising for calorie-dense food, and taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages.?
The bottom line, Sung says is to “try to achieve a healthy weight and maintain it throughout your life to lower your risk of cancer.” Helping your children maintain a healthy weight?can help reduce their obesity-related risks for cancer when they are adults.??
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