Barbecue-stopping news.
Eating sausages, ham and other processed meats causes colon cancer, and red meat “probably” does too, an arm of the World Health Organisation says, in a potentially heavy blow for the global meat industry.
The analysis of 800 studies from around the world by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) found “sufficient evidence in humans that the consumption of processed meat causes colorectal cancer”.
The category includes meat that has been salted, cured, fermented or smoked – hot dogs, sausages, corned beef, dried meat like beef jerky or South African biltong, canned meat or meat-based sauces.
The finding supports “recommendations to limit intake of meat” – particularly in processed forms, the IARC said.
“In view of the large number of people who consume processed meat, the global impact on cancer incidence is of public health importance,” IARC official Kurt Straif said in a statement.
For an individual, the risk of getting cancer from eating processed meat was statistically “small”, the agency said, but “increases with the amount of meat consumed”.
“Each 50-gram portion of processed meat eaten daily increases the risk of colorectal cancer by 18 per cent,” it said in a statement.
The IARC added processed meat to the same group 1 category of cancer-causing agents as tobacco smoke and asbestos.
For unprocessed red meat – beef, veal, pork, lamb, mutton, horse or goat – the review found “strong” evidence of a cancer-causing effect, but not sufficient to place it in the same group of cancer-causing agents.