Saturday, January 20, 2024

Colorectal Cancer is in the News Again. Don't Blame Red Meat

 

Colorectal Cancer in the News

NBC News and other prominent outlets are currently reporting on a dramatic increase in both rates of colon cancer and colon cancer mortality among young adults.1 These news reports, based on a recent publication from the American Cancer Society, suggest a substantial uptick in the disease but can only theorize as to what might be driving it.2 While the ACS report itself is only a dry statistical report, various news outlets and the public health experts they interview hypothesize a number of potential causes, typically of an environmental or dietary nature. One of these potential causes, is of course, meat consumption. So now seems like as good of time as any to discuss why I believe there is no legitimate evidence whatsoever linking meat (most specifically, red meat) consumption to colon and colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence.

Lets start with the ACS report itself, which reports increasing incidence of 6 of the top 10 cancers. For example, cancers of the breast and pancreas ticked up very slightly (less than 1% over five years), while cancers of the prostate and kidney were among those increasing most rapidly (upwards of 3% over five years). Colorectal cancer, on the other hand…is not increasing. So why all the headlines? I think part of it is that CRC makes for a trendy headline of sorts, as its been a particular mainstream focus in the last decade or so (more on that in a minute). The other reason is that, while CRC rates are not increasing overall, they are indeed increasing (between 1 and 2 percent) among people in their 30s and 40s. Perhaps even more relevantly, rates of CRC morality in that demographic are increasing as well.

 

Rates of CRC and other select cancers in adults under the age of 50


So rates are increasing among younger adults in which the disease tends to be relatively rare, but are not increasing overall. What might cause this to be the case? I certainly have a suggestion, but it won’t be the same you see in traditional medical and health circles. If you search the internet for CRC prevention advice, you’ll quickly find (along with advice to exercise and refrain from smoking) advice from the American Cancer Society to limit red and processed meat, from the CDC to limit animal fats, and from Harvard to remove as much meat as possible from your diet (“Red and processed meat has been the dietary factor most consistently linked to colon cancer”). 3–5

None of these claims and none of these recommendations, though, are based on more than weak epidemiology (i.e. survey data). And while potential explanations (curing nitrates in processed meat, for example) have been sought to explain the association between meat consumption and CRC, I believe a much more obvious causal explanation exists both to explain the general association between red meat consumption and CRC AND the recent uptick in young adult incidence of the disease.

 

Increasing Focus on the Meat-CRC Link

 

It’s often presented as an obvious cause and effect, that red meat consumption is tightly linked to and often instrumental in causing CRC to develop. But the evidence does not support these typical claims. Let’s start in 2015, when the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) prepared a study for the World Health Organization on the potential carcinogenic properties of meat. 6 Based (ostensibly) on this paper, the WHO issued a report declaring red meat to be a Category 2A carcinogen, describing it as “probably carcinogenic to humans.” This notion, that beef and other red meat may be cancer-causing, has become increasingly prevalent in the years since.

 

However, I would argue that the claims made by the IARC/WHO are deeply flawed for a number of reasons:

1.       The IARC report did not, in fact, find significant evidence that red meat consumption is linked to cancer in humans

2.       The epidemiological studies that do link meat consumption to cancer are very limited, and typically find only a small effect

3.       The studies linking meat consumption to cancer fail to take into account significant confounding variables.

             

When you first saw the alarming report on the nightly news in late 2015, you’d have been mistaken for believing the WHO made their claims on the back of a significant body of evidence. After all, the WHO is quick to point out that more than 800 studies were examined as part of the report. How many of these 800 studies detailed a significant link between red meat consumption and CRC, you might wonder…

Its certainly not 800. In fact it certainly doesn’t even appear to be 8. Included among those 800 studies were 29 that examined CRC specifically, and of those 29 only 14 showed positive associations between red meat consumption and CRC. But read that sentence again…. Its 14 studies that showed a positive association, not 14 studies that showed a statistically significant connection between CRC and red meat consumption. In fact, in their public report the very first study the IARC references among those 14 says this:

 

“Intake of red meat was positively but not statistically significantly associated with colorectal cancer"7

 

So, again, to be very clear – there were not 14 studies that found a scientific, statistical link between red meat consumption and CRC. There were instead 14 studies that demonstrated some vague, uncertain positive relationship between the two. However, the IARC and WHO made the choice in their reports to misrepresent these weak relationships as scientifically valid, when in fact they are anything but. And since every piece of epidemiology is going to pick up a vague, uncertain trend in one way or the other, we can be fairly confident the other 15 demonstrate some vague, weak, unscientific trend in the opposite direction. So while the totality of the evidence examined found no scientific link between CRC and red meat consumption, and the weak, non-significant trends were equally split between positive and negative, the WHO still made the decision, based on jaw-droppingly weak evidence, to label red meat a probable human carcinogen.

 

Why The CRC-Red Meat Link Still Sometimes Exists

 

Ok, ok….the IARC report didn’t support its own conclusions or its headlines. But there are, indeed, some epidemiological studies out there that show a genuine, significant scientific link between CRC and red meat consumption. There was even one in the public IARC report!8 So now let’s talk about why that link still isn’t what it seems, and what dietary factor I ultimately think is to blame for the uptick in young adult CRC.


**A quick aside – if you aren’t familiar with the concept of healthy user bias, now would be a good time to acquaint yourself. You can do so in detail HERE, but in short – healthy user bias is the concept by which people who want to be healthy do things they believe to be of benefit to their health. The opposite is "unhealthy user bias," in which people who don't care about their health don't mind doing things that are considered unhealthy. Because recommendations to avoid meat predate nutritional epidemiology by more than two decades, there has never been a study unbiased by the widespread belief that meat and fat are unhealthy. Healthy user bias is a massive problem in epidemiology because its effectively impossible to account for all the habitual differences between “healthy” and “unhealthy” individuals. It’s a problem made all the more massive by the fact that so many researches apparently don’t even make an attempt. For example, failure to adjust for a multitude of factors is how you end up with the consistent finding that red meat consumption “causes” as many or more accidents than it does cases of chronic disease9–11**

 

Ok, now…A case study –

The same year as the IARC report, researches at Loma Linda University released a study claiming that "Vegetarian diets are associated with an overall lower incidence of colorectal cancers."12 This study, basically, followed nearly 100,000 Seventh-Day Adventists for six years and compared self-reported diet to incidence of colon cancer. Because meat consumption is frowned upon in the religion, only half of the participants were meat-eaters. What they concluded is that vegetarians, compared to those who consume meat, were 22% less likely to develop colorectal cancer. This translates to roughly a 5% chance that a vegetarian, and a 6% chance that a meat-eater, would develop colorectal cancer during adulthood. And yes, this finding was statistically significant. 

 But it still doesn't mean meat causes cancer. Why? Healthy user bias and confounding variables. It is standard scientific practice to attempt to adjust for HUB, but is not possible to do so completely. Lets specifically examine meat-eaters vs. vegans, using the data from this study, to illustrate why. 

 



 


 

What you might notice at first is that the vegans in the study actually had more cases of colorectal cancer than did the meat-eaters. 7 percent more, to be accurate. But just stopping there would be very bad science indeed, as there are a number of other factors that can influence the results. For example, the meat-eaters are slightly younger and thus less likely, all things considered, to develop cancer of any kind. When the researchers apply the statistical process known as "adjustment" to the age variable, they can eliminate age as a factor and find that, age-adjusted, the vegans actually had 11 percent FEWER cases of colorectal cancer. 

But we can't just adjust for age. You'll also notice that meat-eaters are more overweight, more likely to smoke, more likely to drink, more likely to have diabetes, less likely to exercise, etc. This is (un)healthy user bias in action. Researchers adjust for these as well, with little impact on the final numbers. But what I want to focus on is not what they do adjust for, but what they don’t – namely, sugar and processed carb consumption, blood sugar, and insulin levels. You’ll note in the chart above that I specifically highlighted the diabetes rate of the meat eating group, and with good reason -

 

1. Diabetes is fundamentally a disease of insulin resistance and increased insulin production tightly related to prolonged overconsumption of high-glycemic (sugary) carbohydrates and obesity

        2. Insulin is a potent growth factor

        3. Cancer is a disease of uncontrolled growth, and cancer cells typically overexpress insulin receptors

 

It should not be surprising then, to find that individuals with increased insulin levels are far more likely to develop colorectal cancer. For example..


"An increased concentration of plasma C-peptide was statistically significantly associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer (relative risk [RR] for the highest versus lowest quintile of plasma C-peptide = 2.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.2 to 6.2; P-trend = .047)"13

"Colorectal cancer risk increased with increasing levels of C-peptide (P-trend = .001), up to an odds ratio (OR) of 2.92 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.26–6.75) for the highest versus the lowest quintiles"14

"Cancer mortality was significantly higher in those with hyperinsulinemia than in those without hyperinsulinemia (adjusted HR 2.04)"15

*Note that C-Peptide is a measure of insulin production

 

In fact, a long list of studies show that individuals with high levels of insulin production are as much as 200 to 400 percent more likely to develop colorectal cancer.16–24 But despite insulin's massive role in the development and progression of cancer, it is partially unaccounted for in the study above. We know, with a high level of certainty, that the meat-eating group had higher insulin levels, largely due to the drastically higher rate of diabetes but also the increased obesity (tightly connected to insulin levels) and the great likelihood that the meat eaters are also consuming more sugar and processed carbohydrate (healthy user bias).

Now it is true that obesity and a clinical diagnosis of diabetes are adjusted for, but the vast majority of meat-eaters did not have diabetes. Still, the massively increased rate of diabetes doesn't exist in a vacuum. Diabetes as a clinical diagnosis really just reflects a certain threshold of insulin resistance, not a discrete state. Which is to say that the meat-eating group has more diabetics because the entire group has higher insulin levels, meaning more people will be past the diabetic threshold. The critical point, then, is that this group will also have more "pre-diabetics" and more people with moderately elevated insulin. But without any adjustment made for the consumption of sugar, the consumption of processed grains, actual blood sugar levels, or actual insulin levels, the influence of insulin is allowed to persist. Certainly, then, the meat-eating group is to at least some degree more likely to develop colorectal cancer for reasons that have nothing to do with the consumption of meat. 

In fact, the end result of the study suggests, based on indirect survey data, that meat-eaters are 14% more likely than vegans to develop CRC. Contrast this with the consistent direct findings that individuals with the highest insulin levels are more like 2-300% more likely to develop CRC. These studies together suggest that high insulin is something like 15-20 times more powerful than high meat consumption in predicting the development of future CRC. When insulin is that much more powerful a predictor, it only takes a small degree of negligence in accounting for it to end up with results like the one is this study. Are meat-eaters 14% more likely to develop CRC because meat is driving the disease or because their more sedentary, processed-carb lifestyle results in elevated insulin that isn’t fully being accounted for?

You can see how glaring an oversight it is, then, to ignore the impact of insulin when you attempt to link meat consumption to CRC using only epidemiological survey data. Remember when I pointed out the one study in the IARC report linking red meat to CRC at a statistically significant level? Not only did that study not measure or adjust for sugar consumption, processed carb consumption, blood sugar, or insulin levels, they didn't even adjust for diabetes! If you then further layer in the pile of direct, controlled trials that demonstrate the capacity of a high fat, low-carb diet to improve blood sugar and lower insulin levels, the claims that meat consumption is causing CRC become even more difficult to believe.25–35  


Conclusion

The following facts are all true:


1.      The link between meat consumption and CRC development is based only on a small number of epidemiological surveys, and the degree to which these studies suggest meat ostensibly increases one’s risk is quite small.  

2.      Elevated insulin levels predict CRC development as much as 20 times more strongly than does high levels of meat consumption.

3.     Epidemiological studies incompletely account for insulin levels to varying degrees, with some ignoring blood sugar, insulin levels, and diabetes entirely.

4.     Replacing sugar and carbohydrates with meat and fat lowers long-term blood sugar, lowers insulin levels, and improves markers of glucose metabolism and diabetes.

 

The following facts are also true:

1.       Diabetes rates are increasing more rapidly than CRC rates

2.       Diabetes rates are increasing in children and young adults36

 

I’m sure its entirely obvious where I’m going with this by now, but I’ll share an image from last year’s post on red meat and diabetes to drive home the point:

 



 

Red meat doesn’t cause diabetes and in fact can be instrumental in reversing it. In reality, this discussion on CRC is basically just “red meat doesn’t cause diabetes” with extra steps. Red meat consumption has never been legitimately linked to the development of CRC - A minority percentage of epidemiolocal papers suggest a weak link between the two only by utilizing survey data that fails to fully account for meaningful confounding factors.

On the contrary, insulin levels are directly, strongly, and significantly linked to the development of CRC. As reflected by ever-increasing rates of diabetes and ever-earlier onset of the disease, population levels of blood sugar and insulin continue to increase. If one begins with the (scientifically-valid) premise that impaired glucose metabolism, elevated insulin, and other diabetic complications are directly influential in the onset of CRC, it is effectively inescapable that the increasing rates of diabetes (and young adult diabetes) must portend an increase in young adult CRC as well.

To the degree than any dietary factor is influencing the increase in CRC incidence and mortality, it is these – excess consumption of sugar and processed carbohydrate, chronically elevated blood sugar, and long-term elevated insulin are directly involved in the development of CRC. Red meat, for decades now lumped with smoking, drinking, sugar, and a sedentary lifestyle as the vices of chronic disease, is occasionally caught in the crossfire of weak epidemiological science.

News articles and “expert” advice will likely continue to focus on the minor, weak, indirect link and urge you to prudently fight CRC by eliminating meat despite the lack of evidence to support this position. I’ll do the opposite – if you want to reduce your risk of colorectal cancer, focus on the direct link more than an order of magnitude stronger. Reduce your insulin levels by reducing or eliminating sugar, grains, and other processed carbohydrates, and make a real, meaningful difference in your risk of developing cancer, diabetes, and a host of other chronic diseases. Don’t blame the meat.







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