Litcius/Paper detail

Sugar-Sweetened Beverages and Cancer Risk: A Narrative Review

Carmen Arroyo‐Quiroz, Regina Brunauer, Silvestre Alavez

2022Nutrition and Cancer16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Cancer continues to be a major public health challenge worldwide, not only for being one of the leading causes of death but also because the number of incident cases is projected to grow in the next decades. Meanwhile, sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB) consumption has risen since the past century and constitutes a considerable fraction of added sugars in daily diet. Several studies have analyzed the relationship between SSB intake and health and found substantial evidence for effects on obesity, type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome. However, there is little knowledge about the relationship of SSB with cancer risk. It may be speculated that there is an indirect relationship between SSB and cancer through obesity and metabolic syndrome, but obesity-independent associations through hormonal imbalances or chronic inflammation could also exist. In this review, we describe the epidemiological evidence of the association of SSB and the risk of cancer in adults. Although the epidemiological evidence linking SSB consumption and cancer risk is still limited, prospective studies suggest that high SSB intake may increase the risk of obesity-related cancers, breast and prostate cancer.

Topics & Concepts

ObesityMedicineEpidemiologyCancerEnvironmental healthNarrative reviewType 2 diabetesMetabolic syndromeDiabetes mellitusBreast cancerProstate cancerPublic healthRisk factorInternal medicineEndocrinologyPathologyIntensive care medicineDiet, Metabolism, and DiseaseNutritional Studies and DietLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment