Want to get cancer? Increase your junk food consumption.

Baron

ET Founder
The more foods you consume that have been manufactured by the food industry, the greater your chance of cancer. French epidemiologists conclude this in a study that was published in BMJ.

Study
Researchers from the Sorbonne Université followed 104,980 adults from 2009 to 2017. The researchers were knew the diet of the study participants, and therefore knew how many ultra-processed foods they consumed. These are ready-to-eat foods that have assembled in food factories and hardly contain healthy substances. In a number of European countries, such as England, Ireland and Germany, half of the diet consists of these foods. [theguardian.com 2 Feb 2018]

In the US 58 percent of the diet consists of ultra-processed foods. [BMJ Open. 2016 Mar 9;6(3):e009892.]

The figure below shows which ultra-processed foods were present in the diet of the participants in the French study - and in what quantities.

ultraprocessedfoods.gif



ultraprocessedfoods3.gif



Results
The more of their energy the study participants received through ultra-processed foods, the greater the chance that they were diagnosed with cancer. If the proportion of ultra processed foods in the diet increased by 10 percent, the chance of developing cancer increased by 12 percent.


ultraprocessedfoods2.gif



The correlation between ultra-processed foods and cancer was still present when the researchers corrected for "smoking status, educational level, physical activity, height, body mass index, alcohol intake, family history or cancers, intake of fats, sodium, carbohydrates and Western dietary pattern (derived by factor analysis)."

So - although ultra-processed foods do contain a lot of salt, sugar and bad fats, their unhealthy nutritional composition doesn't fully explain how ultra-processed foods induce cancer. Something else is at play here.

If I'm allowed to make an educated guess: I suspect that during the production process of many ultra-processed foodstuffs unhealthy advanced glycation end products [AGEs] are formed.

Conclusion
"To our knowledge, this study was the first to investigate and highlight an increase in the risk of overall - and more specifically breast cancer associated with ultra-processed food intake", the reserachers write.

"These results should be confirmed by other large scale, population based observational studies in different populations and settings. Further studies are also needed to better understand the relative effect of nutritional composition, food additives, contact materials, and neoformed contaminants in this relation."

"Rapidly increasing consumption of ultra-processed foods may drive an increasing burden of cancer and other non-communicable diseases. Thus, policy actions targeting product reformulation, taxation, and marketing restrictions on ultra-processed products and promotion of fresh or minimally processed foods may contribute to primary cancer prevention. Several countries have already introduced this aspect in their official nutritional recommendations in the name of the precautionary principle."

Source:
BMJ 2018;360:k322.
 
Interesting article. I wasn't sure what was meant by the term "ultra-processed foods", so I did a bit of searching. I came up with the following definition:
Ultra-processed products are made from processed substances extracted or refined from whole foods – e.g. oils, hydrogenated oils and fats, flours and starches, variants of sugar, and cheap parts or remnants of animal foods – with little or no whole foods. Products include burgers, frozen pasta, pizza and pasta dishes, nuggets and sticks, crisps, biscuits, confectionery, cereal bars, carbonated and other sugared drinks, and various snack products. Most are made, advertised, and sold by large or transnational corporations and are very durable, palatable, and ready to consume, which is an enormous commercial advantage over fresh and perishable whole or minimally processed foods … [They] are typically energy dense; have a high glycaemic load; are low in dietary fibre, micronutrients, and phytochemicals; and are high in unhealthy types of dietary fat, free sugars, and sodium.

When consumed in small amounts and with other healthy sources of calories, ultra-processed products are harmless; however, intense palatability (achieved by high content of fat, sugar, salt, and cosmetic and other additives), omnipresence, and sophisticated and aggressive marketing strategies (such as reduced price for super-size servings), all make modest consumption of ultra-processed products unlikely and displacement of fresh or minimally processed foods very likely. These factors also make ultra-processed products liable to harm endogenous satiety mechanisms and so promote energy overconsumption and thus obesity.
From: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/obr.12107/full
Reading this definition it does not surprise me that this kind of "food" is bad for your health.
 
This also applies to erectile dysfunction.
If I eat a nice wholesome steak and potato and salad or soup meal, I'm more likely to experience a quality boner -- or just any boner.

If I eat fast food, I never feel aroused or in the mood. :confused:, :vomit:
 
Is it related to trading? Why is none trading post there in the forum?
Because this is posted in the section "Community Lounge" under "Health and Fitness".
Or are you asking the same question in each and every politics related topic on this forum as well?
 
1. At least they die happy.
2. Just generally being overweight is linked to cancer, it doesn't have to be junk food. So healthy food can give you cancer too, if you eat too much.
1. Happiness is eating ultra-processed food?
2. Provided there are no "cheat" days and that there is a reasonable amount of regular physical activity, I would think it would be difficult to become meaningfully overweight by observing reasonable macronutrient balance and eating healthful foods. Under those conditions, I think you'd pretty much have to go out of your way with the intention of becoming meaningfully overweight.
 
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1. Happiness is eating ultra-processed food?
2. Provided there are no "cheat" days and that there is a reasonable amount of regular physical activity, X

1. Yeap. Happiness is whatever makes people happy, by definition. :)
2. Americans accepted your challenge...

By the way are you trying to say you can not get fat on healthy food? And don't give me the reasonable physical activity bullshit, that wasn't part of the equation.
 
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1. Yeap. Happiness is whatever makes people happy, by definition. :)
2. Americans accepted your challenge...

By the way are you trying to say you can not get fat on healthy food? And don't give me the reasonable physical activity bullshit, that wasn't part of the equation.
1. https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/nutritional-psychiatry-your-brain-on-food-201511168626

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8334353.stm

2. Really?

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bad-eating-habits-killing-americans-bacon-fat-sugar/

http://naturallysavvy.com/eat/why-do-americans-eat-so-poorly
 
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