From the Journals

Heavy drinking in your 20s has lasting impact on cancer risk


 

FROM THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER

‘Striking’ findings

Reached for comment, Timothy Brennan, MD, MPH, chief of clinical services at the Addiction Institute of Mount Sinai in New York, said it is “striking” that heavy drinking in early adulthood led to an increased risk for alcohol-related cancers, even among people who drank much less in middle age.

“We’ve known for decades that alcohol is not harmless, but this data adds to the growing body of literature regarding the significant dangers of heavy drinking during early adulthood,” said Dr. Brennan, who wasn’t involved in the study.

Dr. Brennan cautioned, however, that the authors studied alcohol-related cancers, and “there are likely many other [cancer] risk factors that were not analyzed in this dataset.”

Nevertheless, this evidence helps counter the “troubling narrative” that “it is somehow normal and safe to drink excessively in young adulthood.”

“It is most certainly not safe,” Dr. Brennan told this news organization . “We see in this study that drinking excessively in young adulthood can raise the risk of cancer much later in life.”

The study had no commercial funding. Dr. Bassett, Dr. Jayasekara, and Dr. Brennan have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Increase in late-stage cancer diagnoses after pandemic
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Experimental breast cancer immunotherapy treatment passes important hurdle in pilot study
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Breast cancer trials enrolling now: Could your patient benefit?
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Poor trial representation tied to worse breast cancer survival
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Variants of nine breast cancer genes associated with severe disease
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Should all women be routinely screened for lung cancer?
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Aspirin fails to inhibit breast cancer recurrence
Breast Cancer ICYMI
15th Report on Carcinogens Adds to Its List
Breast Cancer ICYMI
MRI with mammogram reduces breast cancer mortality by more than 50% in high-risk women
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Filling opioid prescriptions akin to a Sisyphean task
Breast Cancer ICYMI