Obesity, Bariatric Surgery, and Cancer Risk: Nutritional Perspectives and Long-Term Clinical Implications
Claudia Reytor-González, Gerardo Sarno, Martha Montalvan, Ludovica Verde, Giuseppe Annunziata, Luigi Barrea, Giovanna Muscogiuri, Daniel Simancas-Racines

TL;DR
Obesity increases cancer risk, and bariatric surgery can reduce it, but long-term nutritional changes must be managed to optimize outcomes.
Contribution
This review integrates recent evidence on how obesity and bariatric surgery influence cancer risk through metabolic and nutritional mechanisms.
Findings
Bariatric surgery reduces overall cancer risk and mortality, especially for obesity-linked cancers.
Micronutrient deficiencies after surgery may affect DNA synthesis and cellular repair.
Gut microbiome and bile acid changes post-surgery may modulate tumor development.
Abstract
Obesity is recognized as a causal risk factor for the development of multiple cancers, with risk magnitude varying by tumor site, sex, life stage, and adipose tissue distribution. This narrative review synthesizes recent epidemiological evidence linking excess body fatness with cancer incidence and mortality and integrates the biological mechanisms that explain this association. Chronic low-grade inflammation, insulin resistance with compensatory hyperinsulinemia, dysregulation of adipose-derived hormones and sex steroids, impairment of anti-tumor immune responses, alterations in the gut microbiota, and remodeling of the tumor microenvironment collectively create conditions that favor tumor initiation and progression. Bariatric surgery is the most effective clinical intervention for achieving substantial and sustained weight loss in individuals with severe obesity, and growing evidence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer Risks and Factors · Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Adipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases
