The short answer
Processed meats like bacon and hot dogs are classed as cancer-causing, mainly linked to colorectal cancer. Red meat, like beef and pork, is a probable cause. Eating less of both, and choosing other proteins, can lower risk. Occasional servings carry less risk than eating these meats often.
Processed meat is classified as a cause of cancer, chiefly colorectal cancer.
Red meat is classified as a probable cause of cancer.
The more processed and red meat a person eats, the higher the colorectal cancer risk tends to be.
Cutting back and choosing proteins like beans, fish, and poultry can help lower risk.
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The full explanation.
The simple version
Meat is a common part of many diets. But how much and what kind of meat you eat can affect your cancer risk.
Processed meats, like bacon and hot dogs, are classed as a cause of cancer. Red meat, like beef and pork, is classed as a probable cause. The main link is with colorectal cancer, which starts in the colon or rectum.
Eating less red and processed meat is a simple step that can lower colorectal cancer risk.
Red meat versus processed meat
These two terms mean different things:
- Red meat is fresh meat from mammals. This includes beef, pork, lamb, and veal.
- Processed meat has been changed to last longer or taste different. This is done by smoking, curing, salting, or adding preservatives. Examples include bacon, ham, sausages, hot dogs, and deli meats.
Processed meat is linked to higher cancer risk than fresh red meat.
What the evidence shows
The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, reviewed hundreds of studies. It concluded:
- Processed meat causes cancer, mainly colorectal cancer. It placed processed meat in its top group, the same one used for other well-established causes of cancer.
- Red meat is a probable cause of cancer. The evidence is strong but not quite as certain.
It is important to understand what this means. Being in the "top group" is about how sure scientists are that something can cause cancer. It is not about how much it raises your personal risk. The actual increase in risk from meat is much smaller than, say, the risk from smoking.
The dose matters
The more processed and red meat a person eats over time, the higher their colorectal cancer risk tends to be. This is called a dose relationship.
A single serving will not give you cancer. An occasional hot dog or steak carries far less risk than eating these meats every day. What matters is your overall pattern over months and years.
How to lower your risk
You do not have to give up meat entirely. Cutting back helps. Here are some ways:
- Eat processed meats like bacon, sausage, and deli meats only rarely.
- Keep red meat to modest portions and fewer days per week.
- Fill your plate with vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and beans.
- Try other proteins, such as fish, poultry, eggs, nuts, and lentils.
Swapping some red or processed meat for these choices adds fiber and nutrients while lowering risk.
A note on cooking
How you cook meat can matter, too. Cooking at very high heat, such as grilling or pan-frying, can form certain chemicals that may raise cancer risk. Charred or burnt parts have more of these chemicals.
To reduce them, you can cook at lower temperatures, avoid direct flames, flip meat often, and trim away any burnt pieces. These small steps can help when you do eat meat.
Keeping it in perspective
It is easy to feel worried when a food you enjoy is called cancer-causing. A few points can help keep things balanced.
First, the increase in risk from meat is modest compared with big risks like smoking. Being in the "top evidence group" tells you how sure scientists are, not how strong the effect is.
Second, this is about long-term patterns, not single meals. An occasional serving of steak or bacon is very different from eating processed meat every day for years.
Third, cutting back brings other benefits. Replacing some red and processed meat with beans, fish, vegetables, and whole grains adds fiber and nutrients and supports a healthy weight, which lowers cancer risk on its own.
You do not have to be perfect. Small, steady changes toward less processed and red meat can meaningfully lower your colorectal cancer risk over time. If you would like help planning meals with less meat, a registered dietitian can offer ideas that fit your tastes and budget.
Words to know
Tap any term to see what it means.
Common questions
▸What is the difference between red meat and processed meat?
Red meat is fresh meat from mammals, like beef, pork, lamb, and veal. Processed meat has been changed to last longer or taste different through smoking, curing, salting, or adding chemicals. Examples are bacon, ham, hot dogs, sausages, and deli meats.
▸Why is processed meat considered cancer-causing?
The International Agency for Research on Cancer reviewed many studies and found enough evidence that processed meat causes colorectal cancer. It placed processed meat in its highest-evidence group, alongside other known causes of cancer.
▸Does eating a hot dog mean I'll get cancer?
No. One serving does not mean you will get cancer. The risk grows the more you eat over time. An occasional serving carries less risk than eating processed meat often. It is about your overall pattern.
▸How much red meat is okay?
There is no single safe amount, but eating less lowers risk. The American Cancer Society suggests limiting red and processed meat. Some guidelines suggest keeping red meat to modest amounts and eating processed meat only rarely.
▸What can I eat instead?
Good choices include beans and lentils, fish, poultry, eggs, nuts, and whole grains. These can replace some red and processed meat in your meals and add fiber and other nutrients.
▸Is grilling or high-heat cooking a concern?
Cooking meat at very high heat, like grilling or frying, can form certain chemicals that may raise cancer risk. Cooking at lower heat, avoiding charring, and not eating burnt parts can help reduce these chemicals.
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