Study: Cancer risk rises with two soft drinks a day
Drinking too many sugary drinks on a daily basis has been linked to gallbladder cancer.
Swedish researchers studied the eating and drinking habits of more than 70,000 adults, keeping an eye out for cancer diagnoses. They found that people who downed two or more soft drinks (including those with artificial sweeteners) or juice beverages a day doubled their risk of developing gallbladder tumors.
Moreover, the soda drinkers also had a 79 percent higher risk of having biliary tract cancer, according to the study, published recently in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Those who had two or more sugary drinks a day also tended to be overweight and ate a less healthy diet — more calories, sugar and carbohydrates and less protein and fat.
People with a history of diabetes or cancer were left out of the study.
While the results do not prove that sugary drinks cause cancer, researchers stressed, there is evidence that the risk is higher for people who drink a lot of heavily sweetened beverages.
"These findings support the hypothesis that high consumption of sweetened beverages may increase the risk of [biliary tract cancers], particularly gallbladder cancer," the scientists from the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden concluded.
Allie Shah