This Is The Type Of Fat Most Strongly Linked To Higher Cancer Risk
And one fat that's protective.
Image by Ivan Gener / Stocksy May 03, 2026 There's a lot of nuance to consider when talking about the impact of dietary fat and health. How much do you need? What type of fat is best? What type of fat raises my risk of heart disease or cancer? A new umbrella review1 dug into 23 meta-analyses to explore how different types of fat (total, saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated) relate to cancer risk. Here's what you need to know.
About the study
To evaluate fat intake and cancer risk, researchers conducted an umbrella review. This type of review synthesizes findings across multiple meta-analyses and is considered among the highest levels of scientific evidence.
The team searched major scientific databases for all relevant studies published through September 2025. They assessed methodological quality using AMSTAR-2 and graded the certainty of evidence with GRADE. In total, 23 meta-analyses met their inclusion criteria.
How different fats stacked up against cancer risk
Higher total fat intake was associated with increased risk of several cancers:
Saturated fat intake specifically was linked to 10% higher risk of breast cancer, 31% higher risk of gastric cancer, 34% higher risk of liver cancer, and 88% higher risk of esophageal cancer.
Polyunsaturated fats were the main type linked to a potential protective effect. This intake was associated with 23% lower risk of gastric cancer.
Notably, the review found no statistically significant associations between any fat type and ovarian, endometrial, or pancreatic cancer.
Why might fats influence cancer risk?
The authors point to a few key biological pathways:
Balancing your fat intake for long-term health
Rather than treating fat as something to fear (or as something to eliminate altogether), this research points to focusing more on fat quality, food context, and overall dietary patterns.
The takeaway
This review adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that the type of fat you eat matters for long-term health, including cancer risk. The goal should be to shift toward unsaturated sources and being more measured with saturated fats, especially from processed foods.
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