Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer: A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies

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Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer : A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies. / Händel, Mina Nicole; Rohde, Jeanett Friis; Jacobsen, Ramune; Heitmann, Berit Lilienthal.

In: Nutrients, Vol. 13, No. 10, 3601, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Händel, MN, Rohde, JF, Jacobsen, R & Heitmann, BL 2021, 'Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer: A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies', Nutrients, vol. 13, no. 10, 3601. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103601

APA

Händel, M. N., Rohde, J. F., Jacobsen, R., & Heitmann, B. L. (2021). Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer: A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies. Nutrients, 13(10), [3601]. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103601

Vancouver

Händel MN, Rohde JF, Jacobsen R, Heitmann BL. Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer: A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies. Nutrients. 2021;13(10). 3601. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103601

Author

Händel, Mina Nicole ; Rohde, Jeanett Friis ; Jacobsen, Ramune ; Heitmann, Berit Lilienthal. / Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer : A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies. In: Nutrients. 2021 ; Vol. 13, No. 10.

Bibtex

@article{fa2f2e4e0ede406592c5e6cea3ff4e57,
title = "Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer: A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies",
abstract = "Based on a large volume of observational scientific studies and many summary papers, a high consumption of meat and processed meat products has been suggested to have a harmful effect on human health. These results have led guideline panels worldwide to recommend to the general population a reduced consumption of processed meat and meat products, with the overarching aim of lowering disease risk, especially of cancer. We revisited and updated the evidence base, evaluating the methodological quality and the certainty of estimates in the published systematic reviews and meta-analyses that examined the association between processed meat consumption and the risk of cancer at different sites across the body, as well as the overall risk of cancer mortality. We further explored if discrepancies in study designs and risks of bias could explain the heterogeneity observed in meta-analyses. In summary, there are severe methodological limitations to the majority of the previously published systematic reviews and meta-analyses that examined the consumption of processed meat and the risk of cancer. Many lacked the proper assessment of the methodological quality of the primary studies they included, or the literature searches did not fulfill the methodological standards needed in order to be systematic and transparent. The primary studies included in the reviews had a potential risk for the misclassification of exposure, a serious risk of bias due to confounding, a moderate to serious risk of bias due to missing data, and/or a moderate to serious risk of selection of the reported results. All these factors may have potentially led to the overestimation of the risk related to processed meat intake across all cancer outcomes. Thus, with the aim of lowering the risk of cancer, the recommendation to reduce the consumption of processed meat and meat products in the general population seems to be based on evidence that is not methodologically strong",
author = "H{\"a}ndel, {Mina Nicole} and Rohde, {Jeanett Friis} and Ramune Jacobsen and Heitmann, {Berit Lilienthal}",
note = "This article belongs to the Special Issue Towards Better Dietary Guidelines: New Approaches Based on Recent Science.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3390/nu13103601",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Nutrients",
issn = "2072-6643",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Processed Meat Consumption and the Risk of Cancer

T2 - A Critical Evaluation of the Constraints of Current Evidence from Epidemiological Studies

AU - Händel, Mina Nicole

AU - Rohde, Jeanett Friis

AU - Jacobsen, Ramune

AU - Heitmann, Berit Lilienthal

N1 - This article belongs to the Special Issue Towards Better Dietary Guidelines: New Approaches Based on Recent Science.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Based on a large volume of observational scientific studies and many summary papers, a high consumption of meat and processed meat products has been suggested to have a harmful effect on human health. These results have led guideline panels worldwide to recommend to the general population a reduced consumption of processed meat and meat products, with the overarching aim of lowering disease risk, especially of cancer. We revisited and updated the evidence base, evaluating the methodological quality and the certainty of estimates in the published systematic reviews and meta-analyses that examined the association between processed meat consumption and the risk of cancer at different sites across the body, as well as the overall risk of cancer mortality. We further explored if discrepancies in study designs and risks of bias could explain the heterogeneity observed in meta-analyses. In summary, there are severe methodological limitations to the majority of the previously published systematic reviews and meta-analyses that examined the consumption of processed meat and the risk of cancer. Many lacked the proper assessment of the methodological quality of the primary studies they included, or the literature searches did not fulfill the methodological standards needed in order to be systematic and transparent. The primary studies included in the reviews had a potential risk for the misclassification of exposure, a serious risk of bias due to confounding, a moderate to serious risk of bias due to missing data, and/or a moderate to serious risk of selection of the reported results. All these factors may have potentially led to the overestimation of the risk related to processed meat intake across all cancer outcomes. Thus, with the aim of lowering the risk of cancer, the recommendation to reduce the consumption of processed meat and meat products in the general population seems to be based on evidence that is not methodologically strong

AB - Based on a large volume of observational scientific studies and many summary papers, a high consumption of meat and processed meat products has been suggested to have a harmful effect on human health. These results have led guideline panels worldwide to recommend to the general population a reduced consumption of processed meat and meat products, with the overarching aim of lowering disease risk, especially of cancer. We revisited and updated the evidence base, evaluating the methodological quality and the certainty of estimates in the published systematic reviews and meta-analyses that examined the association between processed meat consumption and the risk of cancer at different sites across the body, as well as the overall risk of cancer mortality. We further explored if discrepancies in study designs and risks of bias could explain the heterogeneity observed in meta-analyses. In summary, there are severe methodological limitations to the majority of the previously published systematic reviews and meta-analyses that examined the consumption of processed meat and the risk of cancer. Many lacked the proper assessment of the methodological quality of the primary studies they included, or the literature searches did not fulfill the methodological standards needed in order to be systematic and transparent. The primary studies included in the reviews had a potential risk for the misclassification of exposure, a serious risk of bias due to confounding, a moderate to serious risk of bias due to missing data, and/or a moderate to serious risk of selection of the reported results. All these factors may have potentially led to the overestimation of the risk related to processed meat intake across all cancer outcomes. Thus, with the aim of lowering the risk of cancer, the recommendation to reduce the consumption of processed meat and meat products in the general population seems to be based on evidence that is not methodologically strong

U2 - 10.3390/nu13103601

DO - 10.3390/nu13103601

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34684602

VL - 13

JO - Nutrients

JF - Nutrients

SN - 2072-6643

IS - 10

M1 - 3601

ER -

ID: 281987706