Reuters Health Information: Red meat tied to higher risk of dying from many diseases
Red meat tied to higher risk of dying from many diseases
Last Updated: 2017-05-25
By Lisa Rapaport
(Reuters Health) - Eating more red meat is associated with
an increased risk of dying from eight common diseases including
cancer, diabetes and heart disease, as well as �all other
causes� of death, according to a U.S. study.
Researchers examined data on almost 537,000 adults aged 50
to 71 and found the people who consumed the most red meat had 26
percent higher odds than those who ate the least of dying from a
variety of causes.
But people who ate the most white meat, including poultry
and fish, were 25 percent less likely to die of all causes
during the study period than people who consumed the least,
researchers report in The BMJ, online May 9.
"Our findings confirm previous reports on the associations
between red meat and premature death, and it is also large
enough to show similar associations across nine different causes
of death," said lead study author Arash Etemadi of the National
Cancer Institute.
"We also found that for the same total meat intake, people
who reported a diet with a higher proportion of white meat had
lower premature mortality rates," Etemadi said by email.
For the study, researchers followed the health and eating
habits of people from six U.S. states and two metropolitan areas
over about 16 years. They analyzed survey data on total meat
intake as well as consumption of processed and unprocessed red
meat and white meat. Red meat included beef, lamb and pork,
while white meat included chicken, turkey and fish.
Then, researchers sorted people into five groups from lowest
to highest intake of red and white meat to see how this
influenced their odds of death during the study period.
They looked at deaths from nine conditions, including
cancer, heart diseases, stroke and cerebrovascular disease,
respiratory diseases, diabetes, infections, Alzheimer�s disease,
kidney disease and chronic liver disease, as well as all other
causes.
Overall, 128,524 people died, with cancer, heart disease,
respiratory disease and stroke as the leading causes of death.
Only Alzheimer�s disease risk was not linked to red meat
consumption.
Certain ingredients in red meat, including nitrates and heme
iron, may help explain why it's linked to higher mortality rates
for the other causes of death, the authors argue.
The highest intake of heme iron was associated with 15
percent higher odds of premature death than the lowest intake,
the study found.
Nitrates in processed meat were associated with a 15 percent
increased risk of death from all causes, while with unprocessed
meat nitrates were linked to a 16 percent greater mortality
risk, the study also found.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove
how the amount or type of certain meats might directly influence
mortality.
Other limitations include the reliance on survey
participants to accurately recall and report on their eating
habits and the lack of data on any changes in people's diets
over time, the authors note.
Even so, the findings should reinforce the need for many
adults to cut back on meat consumption, said Dr. John Potter of
the Center for Public Health Research at Massey University in
Wellington, New Zealand.
Processed meat can produce cancer-causing chemicals, while
saturated fats in meats can increase the risk of cardiovascular
disease, Potter, author of an accompanying editorial, said by
email. Choosing organic meat may not change the risk of
premature death, Potter added.
"Mortality is higher with higher meat intake for every major
cause of death except Alzheimer's," Potter said.
"The really key issue in all this is that the current level
of meat consumption, in most of the developed world and
increasingly in low- and middle-income countries, is
unprecedented in human history," Potter said. "We need to reduce
meat consumption back to about one-tenth of our current level."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2q73fKq and http://bit.ly/2qqX1VE
BMJ 2017.
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