<p>The study found that in women the risk of cancer rises by about 16 per cent for every 10cm (4 inches) increase in height.<br /><br />Previous studies have shown a link between height and cancer risk, but this research extends the findings to more cancers and for women with differing lifestyles and economic backgrounds.<br /><br />A report of the research is published in The Lancet Oncology. “We showed that the link between greater height and increased total cancer risk is similar across many different populations from Asia, Australasia, Europe, and North America,” said Dr Jane Green, lead author of the study, who is based at the Cancer Epidemiology Unit at Oxford University.<br /><br />She added: “The link between height and cancer risk seems to be common to many different types of cancer and in different people; suggesting that there may be a basic common mechanism, perhaps acting early in peoples’ lives, when they are growing.”<br /><br />To investigate the impact of height on overall and site-specific cancer risk, Dr Green and colleagues assessed the association between height, other factors relevant for cancer, and cancer incidence.<br /><br />The study included 1.3 million middle-aged women in the UK enrolled between 1996 and 2001.<br /><br />During an average follow-up time of about 10 years, 97,000 cases of cancer were identified, a university release said.<br /><br />The risk of total cancer increased with increasing height, as did the risk of many different types of cancer, including cancers of the breast, ovary, womb, bowel, leukaemia and malignant melanoma.</p>
<p>The study found that in women the risk of cancer rises by about 16 per cent for every 10cm (4 inches) increase in height.<br /><br />Previous studies have shown a link between height and cancer risk, but this research extends the findings to more cancers and for women with differing lifestyles and economic backgrounds.<br /><br />A report of the research is published in The Lancet Oncology. “We showed that the link between greater height and increased total cancer risk is similar across many different populations from Asia, Australasia, Europe, and North America,” said Dr Jane Green, lead author of the study, who is based at the Cancer Epidemiology Unit at Oxford University.<br /><br />She added: “The link between height and cancer risk seems to be common to many different types of cancer and in different people; suggesting that there may be a basic common mechanism, perhaps acting early in peoples’ lives, when they are growing.”<br /><br />To investigate the impact of height on overall and site-specific cancer risk, Dr Green and colleagues assessed the association between height, other factors relevant for cancer, and cancer incidence.<br /><br />The study included 1.3 million middle-aged women in the UK enrolled between 1996 and 2001.<br /><br />During an average follow-up time of about 10 years, 97,000 cases of cancer were identified, a university release said.<br /><br />The risk of total cancer increased with increasing height, as did the risk of many different types of cancer, including cancers of the breast, ovary, womb, bowel, leukaemia and malignant melanoma.</p>