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  • Health & Medicine

Headlines saying ‘hot tea causes oesophageal cancer’ miss crucial details

by Georgina Hill | Analysis

20 March 2019

12 comments 12 comments

Photo of a steam cup of black tea.

A cup of tea is part of the daily routine for many people in the UK. But hot drinks have hit headlines today, with new research sparking claims that hot tea ‘doubles the risk of oesophageal cancer’.

The main finding of the study, part-funded by Cancer Research UK, isn’t new. Drinking very hot drinks may raise the risk of oesophageal cancer, and this study adds to the limited evidence by studying a large group of people from Iran.

But how hot is hot? And is that raised risk something to worry about?

What did the study do?

The study, published in the International Journal of Cancer, included people living in Iran and asked about their tea drinking habits, measuring the temperature at which they preferred to drink tea at the beginning of the study.

Researchers checked back with these people 10 years later on average to see how many people had developed a certain type of oesophageal cancer. And if their tea-drinking habits played any role in who developed it.

What did the study show?

People who preferred drinking their tea at or above 60C (140F) had an increased risk of oesophageal cancer, compared to those who preferred drinking their tea below 60C. Crucially, 60C is likely to be a lot hotter than most cups of tea.

But a person’s risk of oesophageal cancer can depend on many factors and the study didn’t look at all of these. The researchers did look at if people had ever smoked or were current smokers, but not how much people had smoked, or for how long. They also didn’t look in detail at their eating habits, which can also affect oesophageal cancer risk.

When news stories say hot tea ‘doubles oesophageal cancer risk’ or increases it ‘by 90%’, it’s important to remember these are relative risks and should be treated with caution, as we’ve blogged about before.

To really understand risk, it needs to be put into context. And that means factoring in how common the disease is overall. In the part of Iran where this study took place, oesophageal cancer rates are high, so something that raises this risk even a little bit will have a larger impact.

But here in the UK, oesophageal cancer is less common, accounting for 3 in 100 new cases of cancer.

So even if very hot drinks might increase someone’s risk of oesophageal cancer, the chances of them developing the cancer are still low, because it isn’t very common in the UK.

So, what might these results mean for you?

It’s important to remember that this study was based on people living in Iran. The traditions and types of tea drunk in Iran may be very different to how most people in the UK drink their tea. For example, the people in the study were drinking green or black tea, where in the UK, most people add cold milk to their tea, which will quickly cool it down.

If you’re leaving your tea to cool for a few minutes before drinking it, even while it’s brewing, or adding cold milk, it’s unlikely that you’re increasing your risk of oesophageal cancer.

And if you’ve accidentally burnt your mouth on a hot drink a few times before, this is unlikely to make much difference.

The researchers say in their study that beverages are usually consumed at more moderate amounts and temperatures in Western populations, like in the UK.

Perhaps most importantly, research shows that there are other things you can do to reduce your risk of oesophageal cancer that will have a bigger impact than ditching your morning brew. Not smoking, keeping a healthy weight and cutting down on how much alcohol you drink are worth more attention than the temperature of your tea.

What’s next for research into this link?

Some studies, based in other places where traditionally people drink very hot drinks, such as China, Turkey and South America, have found a similar link. But more research is needed to understand how hot drinks might affect risk. We’re also funding research trying to track down previously unknown causes of cancer in parts of the world with high rates of certain cancers, including oesophageal cancer.

So far, researchers suggest hot drinks might cause damage by burning cells. This may lead to inflammation that makes it more likely that cancer develops. These damaged tissues may also become more vulnerable to other things that can cause cancer, like chemicals in tobacco smoke.

But, as long as you’re enjoying your tea at a comfortable temperature and leaving it to cool for a bit before you drink it, you shouldn’t worry about increasing your risk by drinking hot drinks.

Georgina Hill is a health information officer at Cancer Research UK 

Reference

Islami, F., et al (2019) A prospective study of tea drinking temperature and risk of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. IJC. DOI: 10.1002/ijc.32220


    Comments

  • Wycliffe omondi
    12 August 2019

    People are just timid abt there life , making false beliefs , how many people have taken hot tea and have not gotten cancer??

  • Hitesh
    20 April 2019

    As a vegetarian non smoking or drinking cancer sufferer I truly think that Cancer is a genetic thing I know plenty of elderly folks who are fit and well and they’ve “abused” their bodies all their lives . One me minute oily fish e.g.is good for you then we’re told not to have to much.
    My advice is eat, drink,and exercise.thats all in your hand and the rest is fate.

  • Julie
    19 April 2019

    Cancer is caused by blocked, denied, suppressed emotions (usually anger/fear) which could then result in someone wanting to abuse themselves by drinking excessively hot drinks. This would be a secondary cause. We need to look at the causal emotions that manifest all physical illness.

  • Tina
    16 April 2019

    I would like to opp out

  • William Gray
    15 April 2019

    it just shows you it dosen’t matter what you eat or drink there’s a good chance you might end up with Cancer, it’s sad.

  • Margaret P Hook
    11 April 2019

    I believe cancer does not come from only one thing we do to our bodies, so I do not think that just drinking hot tea is a culprit but perhaps a helper. As we learn more about cancer we also learn to accept it is a vice to be avoided in a sensible way and not looking for one thing.

  • Brenda Dunstan
    9 April 2019

    Thank you for putting my mind at rest as I enjoy my cups of tea – I thought that I drank them very hot but now realise that they have always cooled a little before I drink them.

  • Blossomstix
    8 April 2019

    I have oesophageal SCC. I live in the UK where this is not so common but rather Adenocarcinoma which I understand is related to diet and obesity. With respect to the one commentator who says tea drinking in Iran is not relevant SCC is still the most common worldwide particularly in Asia and there are many different cultures living here. I always like my tea very hot but was slim and fit (didnt smoke and drank very little) when I was diagnosed with SCC. Let this be a cautionary to those millions of UK citizens who daily purchase scalding coffees on the run and drink Them. It’s not irrelevant at all. After all knowledge is power.

  • Hilary Banks
    5 April 2019

    My Mum died from Oesophageall cancer and she always drank black coffee and it was always scorching hot she hated it warm / cool

  • Ann Flint
    5 April 2019

    My husband had oesophageal cancer and always drank his tea incredibly hot . We used wonder how he drank it this hot ! Always wondered if this could have been a contributing factor . He passed away 15 months after diagnosis

  • Di
    21 March 2019

    My mother-in-law died of oesophageal cancer. She always insisted on her tea being very hot but she also applied this to everything she ate as well. Her Sunday lunch was always so hot on the plate, I used to have to leave mine to cool for several minutes before even trying to eat mine. I think that no one should eat or drink any foods that are too hot, you must be damaging your throat if you do.

  • Dave K
    20 March 2019

    This is so annoying! Iran is a majority muslm country where alcohol consumption is very low. Is this study group really relevant to the UK?
    I have Stage 4 Oesophageal cancer – adenocarcinoma, not squamous. Until after I was diagnosed, I had no idea there was a link between alcohol consumption and being overweight.
    CRUK should be raising awareness of these links, not some spurious research about a potential small increased risk due to tea-drinkng habits which aren’t commn in the UK.

    Comments

  • Wycliffe omondi
    12 August 2019

    People are just timid abt there life , making false beliefs , how many people have taken hot tea and have not gotten cancer??

  • Hitesh
    20 April 2019

    As a vegetarian non smoking or drinking cancer sufferer I truly think that Cancer is a genetic thing I know plenty of elderly folks who are fit and well and they’ve “abused” their bodies all their lives . One me minute oily fish e.g.is good for you then we’re told not to have to much.
    My advice is eat, drink,and exercise.thats all in your hand and the rest is fate.

  • Julie
    19 April 2019

    Cancer is caused by blocked, denied, suppressed emotions (usually anger/fear) which could then result in someone wanting to abuse themselves by drinking excessively hot drinks. This would be a secondary cause. We need to look at the causal emotions that manifest all physical illness.

  • Tina
    16 April 2019

    I would like to opp out

  • William Gray
    15 April 2019

    it just shows you it dosen’t matter what you eat or drink there’s a good chance you might end up with Cancer, it’s sad.

  • Margaret P Hook
    11 April 2019

    I believe cancer does not come from only one thing we do to our bodies, so I do not think that just drinking hot tea is a culprit but perhaps a helper. As we learn more about cancer we also learn to accept it is a vice to be avoided in a sensible way and not looking for one thing.

  • Brenda Dunstan
    9 April 2019

    Thank you for putting my mind at rest as I enjoy my cups of tea – I thought that I drank them very hot but now realise that they have always cooled a little before I drink them.

  • Blossomstix
    8 April 2019

    I have oesophageal SCC. I live in the UK where this is not so common but rather Adenocarcinoma which I understand is related to diet and obesity. With respect to the one commentator who says tea drinking in Iran is not relevant SCC is still the most common worldwide particularly in Asia and there are many different cultures living here. I always like my tea very hot but was slim and fit (didnt smoke and drank very little) when I was diagnosed with SCC. Let this be a cautionary to those millions of UK citizens who daily purchase scalding coffees on the run and drink Them. It’s not irrelevant at all. After all knowledge is power.

  • Hilary Banks
    5 April 2019

    My Mum died from Oesophageall cancer and she always drank black coffee and it was always scorching hot she hated it warm / cool

  • Ann Flint
    5 April 2019

    My husband had oesophageal cancer and always drank his tea incredibly hot . We used wonder how he drank it this hot ! Always wondered if this could have been a contributing factor . He passed away 15 months after diagnosis

  • Di
    21 March 2019

    My mother-in-law died of oesophageal cancer. She always insisted on her tea being very hot but she also applied this to everything she ate as well. Her Sunday lunch was always so hot on the plate, I used to have to leave mine to cool for several minutes before even trying to eat mine. I think that no one should eat or drink any foods that are too hot, you must be damaging your throat if you do.

  • Dave K
    20 March 2019

    This is so annoying! Iran is a majority muslm country where alcohol consumption is very low. Is this study group really relevant to the UK?
    I have Stage 4 Oesophageal cancer – adenocarcinoma, not squamous. Until after I was diagnosed, I had no idea there was a link between alcohol consumption and being overweight.
    CRUK should be raising awareness of these links, not some spurious research about a potential small increased risk due to tea-drinkng habits which aren’t commn in the UK.