US surgeon general sounds alarm about link between alcohol and cancer
CNN
By Ben Tinker, Meg Tirrell and Brenda Goodman, CNN
(CNN) — US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy issued an advisory Friday warning Americans that alcohol consumption can increase their cancer risk and called for an updated health warning label on alcoholic beverages.
Surgeon general’s advisories are strongly stated warnings meant to deliver clear messages about health risks. Advisories are uncommon and reserved for issues that need immediate awareness and action. They often become turning points in the nation’s health habits. A 1964 surgeon general’s report on smoking, for example, started to change the perception that cigarettes were benign.
The new advisory may help do the same for drinking, which was once thought to be associated with some health benefits. The new report aims to dispel any notion that alcohol is harmless.
“Alcohol is a well-established, preventable cause of cancer responsible for about 100,000 cases of cancer and 20,000 cancer deaths annually in the United States – greater than the 13,500 alcohol-associated traffic crash fatalities per year in the US – yet the majority of Americans are unaware of this risk,” Murthy said in a statement.
Roughly 70% of Americans consume alcohol, according to Dr. Brian P. Lee, a liver specialist at Keck Medicine of the University of Southern California who researches the health effects of alcohol, and many are confused about whether an occasional drink is good or bad for them.
Only 45% of Americans surveyed by the American Institute for Cancer Research in 2019 said they believed that drinking alcohol causes cancer, the new advisory notes.
“A lot of confusion comes from prior studies that really weren’t as robust and based on methodology that probably isn’t as accurate,” Lee said.
The new surgeon general’s report is more in tune with modern evidence, Lee said.
“Even light drinking … really, there’s no benefit, and in fact, there may be harm,” he said.
Alcohol is the third-leading preventable cause of cancer in the US, the new advisory says, after tobacco and obesity. It notes that the link between alcohol consumption and cancer risk is well-established for at least seven types of cancer: breast, colorectal, esophagus, liver, mouth, throat and voice box. And the risk remains regardless of what type of alcohol is consumed, and it increases with greater consumption.
Increasingly, evidence has mounted against alcohol consumption because of its health risks, negating a decades-long perception that some alcohol – especially red wine – could benefit health.
Still, nuances persist: A report in December from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine concluded that moderate drinking – two drinks a day or fewer for men and one for women – may be associated with lower risks of cardiovascular disease. It also found that moderate drinking was associated with a higher risk of certain types of cancer.
“There was actually a time when we thought red wine increases risk of some cancers, but the positive effects for cardiovascular disease overwhelm the negative effects for cancer,” said Dr. Otis Brawley, an oncologist at Johns Hopkins University and former chief medical and scientific officer for the American Cancer Society.
Over the past three years, however, a steady stream of scientific evidence and comprehensive research reviews have disproved that idea.
“People need to be warned,” Brawley said. “There is no safe amount of alcohol.”
Alcohol causes cancer in at least four ways, the advisory notes. It is metabolized into a chemical called acetaldehyde, which damages DNA. Damaged DNA can then cause cells to divide out of control, leading to cancer.
“For those sites where there is direct contact … this is clearly the mechanism,” said Dr. Béatrice Lauby-Secretan, head of the Handbooks Programme at the International Agency of Cancer Research, or IARC. Those sites include the mouth, esophagus, stomach and colon, she added.
A recent IARC report found that about 20% of the nearly 75,000 lip and mouth cancers diagnosed worldwide each year are caused by drinking alcohol, for example.
Alcohol also creates unstable molecules called free radicals that can damage DNA and lead to cancer.
It alters levels of hormones, like estrogen and testosterone, which increases cancers at hormone-sensitive sites like the breast and prostate.
Alcohol also depletes levels of important nutrients, such as B vitamins and folate, that help protect the body against cancer, said Dr. Shuji Ogino, a professor of epidemiology and pathology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
Alcohol is a powerful solvent too, so when it comes into contact with other carcinogens like cigarettes, it extracts higher levels of cancer-causing substances from those products and potentiates their effects. That makes it an especially dangerous companion for any kind of tobacco product, including smokeless tobacco.
“It’s no longer two plus two equals four. It’s two plus two equals six,” Lauby-Secretan said.
For cancers like those of the breast, mouth and throat, the risk may start to develop with one or fewer drinks per day, the surgeon general’s office said. It also noted that any individual’s cancer risk is influenced by a number of factors, including their own biology and environment.
Alcohol increases cancer risk for both sexes, but the risks of drinking are higher for women than for men.
A woman who lives to be 80 years old has a roughly 17% chance of developing an alcohol-related cancer over the course of her lifetime, even if she drinks less than one drink per week, the report notes. That risk rises with the amount of alcohol consumed. With one drink a day, women have a 19% risk of developing an alcohol-related cancer, and there’s a nearly 22% risk of developing an alcohol-related cancer with two drinks a day.
For men, those same risks are 10% for less than one drink a week, 11% for one drink a day and 13% risk at two daily drinks.
There are several reasons why women are more vulnerable to alcohol-related cancers. Body size is one factor. Women are generally smaller, “so at the same quantity of alcohol use, you have higher blood levels and exposure of each cell in your body to alcohol,” Lee said.
Alcohol also interacts with body fat, which women tend to have more of than men, and disrupts hormonal balance, which can spur the development of cancers of the breast and prostate, Lee said.
Doctors said they were pleased to see the new advisory.
“I was very excited about this report,” said Dr. David Greenberg, chief of hematology and oncology at Hackensack Meridian Jersey Shore University Medical Center. “I’ve been kind of harping on this for a few years now.
“it’s remarkable how many of my family and friends and patients are just not aware of how dangerous and toxic alcohol can be,” he said.
Greenberg said he’s a drinker but watches his consumption. He’s doing “dry January,” a social movement to encourage abstinence from alcohol for the first month of the year.
“If you play it by the book, you shouldn’t drink any alcohol, because it’s all toxic,” he said, but he also tells his patients that abstaining completely isn’t very realistic or fun.
“If you’re going to drink, it should be done very moderately and not that frequently,” he said.
Surveys show that certain groups are getting the moderation message. Mocktails are gaining social acceptance as a way to cut back, and spirits manufacturers are offering more nonalcoholic alternatives to their products, too.
Younger adults in the US have already started to view drinking as less healthy; an August Gallup poll found that almost half of Americans say that having one or two drinks a day is bad for a person’s health – the highest percentage recorded in the survey’s 23 years. Younger adults were most likely to say drinking is bad for health.
The surgeon general’s advisory also calls for guideline limits for alcohol consumption to be assessed to account for cancer risk, and seeks to raise awareness for individuals about the link to cancer risk as they decide whether and how much to drink.
“I 100% agree with this, and there should be a warning label,” Ogino said. “It should have happened a little bit earlier,” he said, but better late than never.
An updated warning label on alcoholic beverages to reflect cancer risk would require approval from Congress. The currently required warning says that women shouldn’t drink alcoholic beverages during pregnancy and that consuming alcohol impairs your ability to drive a car or operate machinery, and may cause health problems. The advisory points out that it “has remained unchanged since its inception in 1988.”
The current warning “has long informed consumers about the potential risks of the consumption of alcohol,” Dr. Amanda Berger, senior vice president of science and research at the Distilled Spirits Council, said in a statement Friday. “Many lifestyle choices carry potential risks, and it is the federal government’s role to determine any proposed changes to the warning statements based on the entire body of scientific research.”
Murthy noted to CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Friday that health care providers can help increase awareness of the risks, too.
“Doctors and nurses can play a role in educating patients about this. And I want everybody to know out there that, especially if you’re concerned about this, if you have a personal history of cancer or family history of cancer, one of the things you can do to reduce your risk is reconsider how much you drink,” Murthy said.
The American Medical Association, which has long recognized alcohol as a cancer risk, cheered the new advisory.
“Today’s advisory, coupled with a push to update the Surgeon General’s health warning label on alcoholic beverages, will bolster awareness, improve health, and save lives,” AMA President Dr. Bruce Scott said in a statement.
Murthy has also issued Surgeon General’s Advisories on topics including firearm violence, loneliness and isolation, social media and youth mental health, and the mental health of parents.
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