New Research Finds the Genetic Mutation That Links High Meat Intake and Cancer

New Research Finds the Genetic Mutation That Links High Meat Intake and Cancer

A study published in the June 2021 issue ofCancer Discoverysheds new light on how eating red meat may promote the growth of colorectal cancers.

Numerousstudieshave linked colon cancer and red meat consumption, prompting the World Health Organization to classify red meat as aprobable carcinogenin 2015. Still, scientists have been unable to tease out the exact nature of the relationship.

"What [has been] missing is a demonstration that colorectal cancers ... have a specific pattern of mutations that can be attributed to red meat," said lead author Marios Giannakis, MD, PhD, an oncologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.

To understand the biological mechanisms by which red meat might in fact causecancer, Giannakis and a team of researchers pooled data from three prospective cohort studies: theNurses’ Health Studies I and IIand theHealth Professionals Follow-Up Study. These large-scale, long-term studies followed participants for decades, collecting extensive information about their diets and lifestyles and monitoring their health outcomes. During the course of these studies, 4,855 participants developed colorectal cancer.

For their review, Giannakis and his team focused on 900 participants from whom tumor tissue samples had been collected. They segmented these participants into groups based on the amount of red meat that they ate, and used DNA sequencing and tissue samples to identify any patterns among the different subsets.

When looking at tumors from the group who ate the most red meat, a common trait stood out: They tended to show signs of alkylation, a type of DNA damage that can lead to cancer-causing genetic mutations.

Notably, the researchers also found that of the 900 colorectal cancer patients included in their review, those whose tumors had the highest levels of alkylating damage were 47 percent more likely to die of colorectal cancer than those whose tumors had the lowest levels of alkylating damage.

Mounting Evidence

The study authors note that these findings “provide molecular evidence” that red meat is likely carcinogenic.

"The accumulation of evidence is mounting," Giannakis said in aninterview with Healio. "Individuals should consume a balanced diet, rich in fruits and vegetables, and avoid high intake of red meat."

Colon cancer is the third-most common cancer in the United States, excluding skin cancers. Since the mid-1980s, as more people have been gettingscreened, the U.S. has seen a drop in the incidence of colon cancer overall. However, among adults under 50, the rate has beenincrementally increasingsince the mid-1990s.

To learn more about a whole-food, plant-based diet, visit ourPlant-Based Primer. For meal-planning support, check outForks Meal Planner, FOK’s easy weekly meal-planning tool to keep you on a healthy plant-based path.

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