This story is from September 02, 2025

Too little or too much of THIS common vitamin may raise cancer risk, experts find

Too little or too much of THIS common vitamin may raise cancer risk, experts find
Vitamin A is a powerful nutrient which is vital for vision, immunity, and skin health. For decades, it has been believed that consuming enough of this vitamin protects the body from illnesses, including cancer. But science, as always, has layers. A new study sheds light on an unexpected twist: when it comes to vitamin A, both too little and too much might carry risks.

Vitamin A

Vitamin A is not just one nutrient but a group of fat-soluble compounds found in foods like carrots, sweet potatoes, spinach, dairy, and even liver. It helps cells grow and repair, a function that naturally connects it to the body’s defence against abnormal growth, like cancer.However, the latest research challenges the straight-line belief that “more is always better.” Instead, it suggests that vitamin A works like a tightrope walk, beneficial only within a safe range, risky when extremes are reached.

What the study found

The research examined 3,758 cancer patients and 2,995 hospital controls. Using a detailed food questionnaire, scientists looked at how much vitamin A participants consumed daily.The findings were striking:
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Those who consumed too little vitamin A had nearly double the risk of developing cancer.Those who consumed very high amounts also carried a similar risk.This formed what researchers call a U-shaped relationship, where both ends of intake (too low and too high) increased the danger, while the middle ground appeared safest.

The “sweet spot” for vitamin A

According to the study, the reference safe intake range was 85.3–104.0 µg/day. Staying within this range showed the lowest risk of cancer development.This U-shaped trend was observed across multiple cancer types, such as esophagus, stomach, breast, and rectum, but not in lung and colon cancers. The researchers also adjusted for factors like smoking, alcohol consumption, and body weight, yet the U-shaped curve remained steady.This means the finding was not a coincidence, it held its ground even after careful consideration of other lifestyle factors.

Why does the balance matter?

Nutrients often behave like puzzle pieces; one missing piece can distort the whole picture, but forcing too many in the frame causes cracks. Vitamin A seems to be following this principle. While deficiency weakens the body’s defences, excess may tip cellular processes toward harm.The truth here is not about fearing vitamin A or rushing to supplements, but about respecting balance. The study does not declare vitamin A as a cure or a culprit, but as a nutrient that requires moderation.Disclaimer: This article is based on a hospital-based case-control study that explored the link between vitamin A intake and cancer risk. The results do not suggest taking supplements or drastically altering diets without medical guidance. Further research is needed before firm dietary recommendations can be made. Always consult a healthcare professional for personalised advice.

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