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Harvard gastroenterologist warns against three foods that quietly raise cancer risk

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 26, 2025, 11:35 IST
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1/5

Harvard gastroenterologist warns against three foods that quietly raise cancer risk

Tea, coffee, bread or wine. The choices seem small, but they add up in ways the body never forgets. Some foods restore and protect, keeping the machinery of life running smoothly. Others leave quiet damage behind, straining the organs that work hardest after every meal. The liver, the gut and the pancreas sit at the centre of digestion. They filter, absorb and balance, yet they are also the first to falter when diet turns careless. Cancer often begins here, fed by years of routine excess. Dr Saurabh Sethi, MD, MPH, Gastroenterologist trained at Harvard, Stanford and AIIMS, explains that removing a few high-risk foods is one of the simplest ways to lighten that load. The advice is almost disarmingly simple. The impact can change a life. Scroll down to read more...

2/5

Ultra-processed foods

Ultra-processed foods are more than quick fixes, they are creations. The chips and biscuits, the instant noodles, the frosted cereals, the fizzy drinks, the boxes of frozen dinners, each is assembled from refined starch, cheap sugar, industrial oils and a cocktail of additives meant to mimic taste and texture. It is not a single ingredient that does the harm, it is the blueprint itself. These foods jolt blood sugar and insulin, unsettle the gut’s delicate microbiome and stoke a quiet fire of inflammation. Over time - that silent pressure bears down hardest on the colon, the pancreas and the liver.

Large reviews now link regular consumption of ultra-processed foods with higher risks of colorectal cancer and other digestive diseases. Swapping toward minimally processed meals like whole grains, legumes, vegetables, fruit, eggs, fish, plain fermented dairy may begin to reverse those signals.

3/5

Alcohol

Alcohol remains socially charming and biologically blunt. Once taken, it’s metabolized into acetaldehyde, a reactive compound that can damage DNA and interfere with repair. That’s central to its link with cancers of the liver, colon, and pancreas. The medical consensus has tightened: alcohol is a carcinogen, and for cancer prevention there is no “safe” level.

If alcohol is part of your life, cutting frequency and dose matters. Shifting from nightly pours to occasional, modest servings is a measurable win for your liver and pancreas. Many people find it is the ritual they love, the glass, the pause - which can be kept with alcohol-free bitters, sparkling water, shrubs, or kombucha. It can cause digestive problems like gastritis, stomach ulcers, and pancreatitis. It weakens the immune system, making the body more susceptible to infections.

4/5

Processed meat

Processed meats - bacon, ham, sausages, hot dogs, deli slices, cured and smoked varieties carry a well-established cancer signal. Nitrates and nitrites added during curing can form cancer-causing compounds in the digestive tract; high-temperature processing introduces additional reactive molecules. The result is a consistent association with colorectal cancer, strong enough for international health agencies to classify processed meat as carcinogenic to humans.

The pragmatic move is to make processed meat an exception, not a staple. When a sandwich or breakfast needs protein, lean poultry, fish, paneer or tofu, beans, or lentils do the job without the same hazards.

5/5

How to translate this into a plate you’ll actually enjoy

Prevention fails when it feels like punishment. Keep the cooking joyful and the rules simple. Health isn’t built in denial, it’s built in rhythm, the everyday balance between nourishment and pleasure, discipline and ease. Build meals that look like they came from a market, not a factory: dal and brown rice with a heap of greens; grilled fish or egg curry with millet rotis; a big salad anchored by chickpeas, nuts, mustard oil or olive oil, and yoghurt. Keep colours on the plate, textures that remind you food is alive. Batch-cook basics on Sunday so midweek dinners don’t default to boxes and packets. If alcohol is tied to socialising, set a weekly cap and keep tasty non-alcoholic options at home; if brunch screams bacon, order it rarely and relish it when you do. Experiment with herbs, spices, and seasonal vegetables to keep meals exciting and nourishing. Small choices, repeated, change the baseline risk. Over time, these patterns shape not just your body, but your mind’s relationship with food — less guilt, more awareness, more joy in the act of eating and feeding yourself well. Consistency becomes quiet strength, helping you stay resilient through changing seasons, moods, and cravings, while food remains what it’s meant to be — comforting, vibrant, and deeply human.

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Copyright © Jun 6, 2026, 03.37PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service