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The 10 lifestyle tweaks you can make today to slash your risk of killer bowel and breast cancers revealed

Published on April 08, 2025 at 11:01 PM

SCIENTISTS have identified the 10 lifestyle tweaks that can drastically reduce your risk of bowel and breast cancer.

A major new report from the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) marks an “immense step forward” in understanding how daily habits are key to preventing the , experts said.

Illustration of lifestyle changes to improve cancer treatment, including no smoking, drinking tea, eating fruits, exercising, and avoiding unhealthy food.
Experts have recommended certain lifestyle changes to ward off breast cancer and bowel cancer
Woman in sportswear drinking a green smoothie in her kitchen.
Keeping to a healthy weight and exercising is one of the recommendations

Maintaining a healthy weight, , prioritising fibre-rich foods, and drinking more coffee are among the simple lifestyle changes you can make to reduce your risk of two of the UK's biggest cancers – and .

In the UK, 11,500 women and 85 men die from breast cancer every year, and around 16,800 lives are lost to bowel cancer annually.

Many studies have previously focused on how single nutrients or food groups can impact risk.

But the new report by WCRF International emphasises how analysing Dietary and Lifestyle Patterns (DLPs) together can help researchers and the public to better understand the factors that affect cancer risk.

Dietary patterns refer to quantities, proportions, combinations and varieties of different foods, drinks and nutrients, and the frequency with which they are consumed.

DLPs refer to a combination of a certain dietary pattern with other measures such as body weight and behaviour-related risk factors including physical activity, alcohol consumption and .

Experts from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the HealthResearchInstitute of the Balearic Islands evaluated global research on how diet, nutrition, physical activity, and body weight affect breast and bowelcancerincidence and mortality.

WCRF International then worked with an expert panel who judged the evidence and made the cancer-preventing dietary and lifestyle recommendations.

Recommended lifestyle changes to reduce bowel cancer risk

Woman holding her stomach in pain.
Around 16,800 lives are lost to bowelcancerannually

Based on this evidence, they recommended a DLP for reducing the risk of bowel cancer that includes:

  1. Maintaining a healthy weight and regularly taking part in
  2. Prioritising fruit and vegetables, as well as fibre-containing foods
  3. Consuming coffee and food and beverages that contain calcium such as dairy products
  4. Reducing the consumption of and alcohol
  5. Avoiding
  6. Avoiding eating

Global Cancer Update Programme collaborator and Professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, Prof Edward Giovannucci, said: “The work by the Global Cancer Update Programme in reviewing and synthesising the literature on the role of dietary and lifestyle patterns in relation to bowel cancer risk and mortality represents an immense step forward in how healthy lifestyle habits are key to prevention of cancer.

“These new findings strongly support that adopting a healthy pattern of diet, maintaining a healthy weight, staying physically active, and embracing health-conscious habits, such as avoiding tobacco and moderating , are collectively associated with a lower risk of bowel cancer.”;

Recommended lifestyle changes to reduce breast cancer risk

Illustration of a breast tumor.
11,500 women and 85 men die from breastcancerevery year

For breastcancerincidence and mortality, they recommended a DLP that includes:

  1. Maintaining a healthy weight and regularly taking part in physical activity
  2. Prioritising fruit and vegetables and fibre-containing foods
  3. Lowering consumption of red and processed meat and sugar sweetened beverages
  4. Avoiding alcohol and smoking

GlobalCancerUpdate Programme collaborator andLead Researcher at the HealthResearchInstitute of the Balearic Islands and the Physiopathology of Obesity and Nutrition Networking BiomedicalResearchCentre, Dr Dora Romaguera, said: “This report provides clear evidence that by looking at our whole diet and the way we live, there are clear steps to recommend to women to lower their breastcancerrisk. Importantly, this work highlights the greatest benefit is found when adhering to most aspects of acancerpreventative pattern simultaneously.

“By looking out our whole diet and the way we live, there are clear steps we can take to minimise our risk of breast cancer.”;

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