Journal article
Consumption of sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened soft drinks and risk of cancers not related to obesity
JK Bassett, RL Milne, DR English, GG Giles, AM Hodge
International Journal of Cancer | WILEY | Published : 2020
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.32772
Abstract
Consumption of sugary drinks increases the risk of obesity. Previously, we reported a positive association between sugar-sweetened soft drink consumption and obesity-related cancer, but this association was not fully explained by obesity; in contrast, we found no association for consumption of artificially sweetened soft drinks. Our aim was to determine whether the consumption of sugar-sweetened or artificially sweetened soft drinks was associated with cancers other than those currently identified as being related to obesity. We used data from the Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study. Participants completed a 121-item food-frequency questionnaire at baseline including separate questions abou..
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Grants
Awarded by VicHealth
Funding Acknowledgements
Grant sponsor: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council; Grant numbers: 1074383, 209057, 396414; Grant sponsor: Cancer Council Victoria; Grant sponsor: VicHealth