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    Home»News»Early obesity before 40 linked to 70% higher cancer risk, study finds
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    Early obesity before 40 linked to 70% higher cancer risk, study finds

    Whatfinger EditorBy Whatfinger EditorApril 18, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Being overweight before age 40 increases endometrial cancer risk by 70% and male renal-cell cancer risk by 58%. Overall, 15% higher risk for 13 obesity-related cancers (including breast, colorectal, pancreatic and liver cancers).
    Study details: 221,274 individuals tracked over 18 years by the University of Bergen. Findings reinforce prior research showing obesity doubles or triples early mortality risk.
    Early weight gain is dangerous. Prolonged fat exposure fuels chronic inflammation, insulin resistance and hormonal imbalances, driving cancer. Gender differences: Men face higher obesity-related cancer risks in early adulthood, while women remain vulnerable regardless of timing.
    Forty-two percent of U.S. adults are obese, with younger demographics seeing the fastest rise. Obesity-related cancers are now appearing under age 50, yet policy changes (sugar taxes, food labeling) lag due to industry influence and weight stigma.
    Early intervention (diet, exercise, toxin avoidance) is critical—weight gained in youth is far more damaging than later in life. Researchers warn: “Preventing early weight gain could be one of the most effective ways to reduce cancer deaths.”

    New research reveals that being overweight before age 40 significantly increases the risk of developing certain cancers, with some risks rising by as much as 70%.


    Read Full Article: https://www.naturalnews.com/2026-04-18-early-obesity-before-40-higher-cancer-risk.html

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