Regularly Having 2 Drinks a Day Raises Colorectal Cancer Risk


Averaging more than 14 alcoholic drinks per week over a lifetime — that’s two or more drinks per day — can significantly raise your chances of developing colorectal cancer, particularly rectal cancer, according to a large new study.

Results published this week in the journal Cancer showed that lifetime heavy drinkers had a 25 percent higher risk of developing colorectal cancer and a 95 percent higher risk of developing rectal cancer than lifetime light drinkers.

It’s possible, though, for that risk to be reversed. Heavy drinkers who quit completely or substantially cut back saw their odds of developing colorectal cancer drop.

There was no difference in colorectal cancer risk between light drinkers and former drinkers,” says the co–senior study author Erikka Lotfield, PhD, MPH, a researcher with the National Cancer Institute.