A man who drinks moderate or high amounts of alcohol
 over the course of his life appears to raise his risk for developing 
certain — but not all — kinds of cancer, a new crunching of 
quarter-century-old research data suggests.
The study, by Canadian researchers, found that the 
more men drink, the greater their risk for specific cancers. However, 
the link appears to involve mostly beer and spirit consumption, not 
wine. The study did not explore risk among women.
“We found that with lifetime alcohol consumption, 
cancer risk among men increases for some of the 13 cancers we looked 
at,” said study author Andrea Benedetti, an assistant professor in the 
departments of medicine and epidemiology, biostatistics and occupational
 health at McGill University in Montreal. “Those include esophageal, 
colon, stomach, liver, lung and prostate cancers.” “And we also found that … those with the highest 
consumption had a quite higher risk increase for these cancers, relative
 to lower-consumption drinkers,” Benedetti said. She worked on the study
 while a post-doctorate fellow at the University of Quebec.
A report on the findings has been published online in Cancer Detection and Prevention.
Associations between alcohol consumption and cancer 
have been the subject of much study, the researchers pointed out, with 
indications that alcohol could be the prime culprit in up to 5 percent 
of deaths from all cancers combined.
One recent study specifically revealed that heavy drinking in particular raises the risk for developing aggressive prostate cancer in men while undermining the effectiveness of the popular prostate cancer
 prevention drug finasteride (Proscar). Another study suggested that, 
among women, even moderate drinking might elevate risk for breast, liver
 and other cancers.
The Canadian research team used data first collected
 in the 1980s for a study that sought to examine potential links between
 hundreds of occupational hazards and cancer risk.
Participants in that study were men between the ages
 of 35 and 70 who had been diagnosed with any of 20 cancers. Collected 
data included ethnicity, income, smoking history, diet and occupational 
exposures, as well as alcohol consumption patterns.
For the new study, the researchers focused on nearly
 3,600 people for whom they had data on alcohol use as well as their 
cancer history. Types of cancer represented were bladder, colon, 
esophageal, kidney, liver, lung, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, non-Hodgkin 
lymphoma, melanoma, pancreatic, prostate, rectal and stomach.
Among men considered “regular drinkers,” defined as 
drinking on a daily or weekly basis, alcohol was linked to an increased 
risk for nearly half of the cancer types — specifically, esophageal, 
stomach, colon, liver, lung and prostate cancer.
And the more alcohol that such regular drinkers 
consumed, the higher their risk rose relative to those who did not drink
 at all or drank infrequently, the study reported.
Although Benedetti noted that “wine consumption was 
not an issue,” she also acknowledged that the researchers “weren’t able 
to look at the impact of wine as much as we wanted to because we didn’t 
have enough information available.”
“And I wouldn’t want to say that heavy wine 
drinking, for example, is OK,” she cautioned. “But it appears from what 
we found that light and moderate drinking of wine is not linked to an 
increased risk for cancer, while light and moderate consumption of beer 
and spirits does have some risk attached to it.”
However, William J. Blot, associate director of 
research at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center in Nashville, Tenn., 
questioned the impact that the study might have.
“This study looked at data that is actually 25 years
 old,” Blot said. “And it’s been known for a long time that particularly
 heavy drinking can increase the risk for certain types of cancer.”
“We’ve known, for example, for maybe 30 years now 
that heavy drinking increases the risk for esophageal cancer,” he said. 
“And drinking and oral cancer of the oral cavity and larynx are also 
well-established risks. Those are the strongest associations previously 
identified, although pancreatic and liver cancers have also been linked 
in the past, while lung cancer has generally not been considered to be 
an alcohol-related cancer because, in reality, it’s really almost 
impossible to de-link smokers from drinkers since the two behaviors tend
 to overlap so frequently.”
Blot also noted that, when broken down by cancer type, the number of men with some of the cancers was “not particularly large.”
The study included all types of cancer from the 
original study that had been diagnosed in at least 25 participants. The 
numbers ranged from a low of 28 men with liver cancer to a high of 700 
with lung cancer.
“There have been other studies with quite a few more
 patients that, therefore, have more precise information,” Blot said. 
“So, I would say there is really nothing new or striking about this 
finding.”
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