Paul Saladino· MD
limited evidence of an association between milk intake and a lower risk of bladder cancer
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
limited evidence of an association between milk intake and a lower risk of bladder cancer
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other cancers there's certainly a significant amount of evidence to suggest that there's an inverse association between dairy consumption and those types of cancers
total dairy products intake have no significant impact on increased all cancer mortality risk etc
Among cancers, milk and dairy intake was inversely associated with colorectal cancer, bladder cancer, gastric cancer, breast cancer, and was not associated with risk of pancreatic ovarian cancer or lung cancer, while the evidence for prostate cancer risk was inconsistent.
among cancers milk and dairy intake was inversely associated with colorectal cancer bladder cancer gastric cancer breast cancer
milk and dairy intake inversely associated with colorectal bladder gastric cancer and breast cancer
the world cancer research fund and the American Institute for cancer research report concluded there was a probable association between milk intake and a lower risk of colorectal cancer and limited evidence of an association between milk intake and a lower risk of bladder cancer