Cooking Oils and Cancer

Cooking Oil Smoke Point and Cancer

A cooking oil's smoke point is the temperature at which it begins to smoke visibly when heated. When an oil starts smoking it is oxidizing and could damage your body. 

A smoke point is the maximum safe cooking temperature. You should avoid heating the oil past this temperature. If you do heat past the smoke point you increase the risk of the oil turning brown, forming oxidized chemicals that can harm your body and increase your risk of cancer. People who work in kitchens and restaurants with cooking oils and poor ventilation have an increased lung cancer, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer risk.

Each oil manufacturer has a different chemical composition because of processing methods and each batch of fruit, vegetable and seed will vary. These factors will affect the smoke point. 

Fat/Oil

Quality

Smoke Point

Flax seed oil
Unrefined 225°F
Safflower oil
Unrefined 225°F
Sunflower oil
Unrefined 225°F
Butter
  250–300°F
Peanut oil
Unrefined 320°F
Safflower oil
Semirefined 320°F
Soybean oil
Unrefined 320°F
Sunflower oil, high oleic
Unrefined 320°F
Walnut oil
Unrefined 320°F
Hemp oil
  330°F
Coconut oil
Virgin (Unrefined) 350°F
Sesame oil
Unrefined 350°F
Soybean oil
Semirefined 350°F
Corn oil
Unrefined 352°F
Vegetable shortening
  360°F
Avocado oil
Un-Refined, Virgin 375-400°F
Canola oil(Rapeseed)
Expeller Press 375-450°F
Olive oil
Extra virgin 375°F
Lard
  390°F
Olive oil
Virgin 391°F
Castor oil
Refined 392°F
Canola oil
Refined 400°F
Walnut oil
Semirefined 400°F
Olive oil, high quality (low acidity)
Extra virgin 405°F
Macadamia oil
  413°F
Tallow (Beef)
  420°F
Cottonseed oil
  420°F
Almond oil
  420°F
Grapeseed oil
  420°F
Hazelnut oil
  430°F
Sunflower oil
Refined 440°F
Corn oil
Refined 450°F
Peanut oil
Refined 450°F
Coconut oil
Refined with stabilizers 450°F
Sesame oil
Semirefined 450°F
Sunflower oil
Semirefined 450°F
Palm oil
Difractionated 455°F
Olive oil
Pomace 460°F
Soybean oil
Refined 460°F
Olive oil
Extra light 468°F
Canola oil
High Oleic 475°F
Ghee (Indian Clarified Butter)
  485°F
Tea seed oil
  485°F
Mustard oil
  489°F
Rice bran oil
  490°F
Safflower oil
Refined 510°F
Avocado oil
Refined 520°F

 Just because you can cook or fry in oil at a high temperature doesn't mean it's a safe option. Cooking meat above 300F/149C creates carcinogens. Cooking or frying carbohydrates like potatoes and breads (donuts) above 350F/177C causes the formation of carcinogen acrylamide. 


The worst type of oil cooking

Prolonged heating of cooking oils produces chemicals such as aldehydes, heterocyclic amines, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, free fatty acids, and acrylamide which can alter cellular metabolism and contribute to cancer. The longer the oil is heated and the higher the temperature the greater the concern. Oil smoking and turning dark are a couple of signs the oils are going bad.

Deep frying foods is associated with an increased risk of several cancers. I have them listed in a comment. In the U.S. the most common source of these foods comes from fast food restaurants. These oils may be used for days.

Reusing vegetable cooking oils is associated with BRCA1 breast cancer mutations.

Pan frying and stir-frying foods at moderate temperatures, in well-ventilated areas, don’t seem to be associated with significant risks of cancer. 

Cooking foods at Temperatures above 350F/177C increases the risks of 

  • breast cancer
  • breast cancer metastasis
  • colorectal cancer
  • pancreatic cancer
  • prostate cancer
  • lung cancer
  • bladder cancer
  • colon cancer
  • rectal cancer
  • Non-Hodgkins lymphoma 
  • kidney cancer (renal cancer)
  • gastric cancer
  • esophagus cancer (esophageal cancer)
  • liver cancer 

Deep fried foods are Cancer Tactic Not Approved. 

Pan fried at home foods are probably safer. Remember keep the temperature below 350F/177C. 

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Reference Sources Include

Edible Oil Smoke & Flash Points [TEMPERATURE CHART] (centrafoods.com) accessed 04/11/2023. 

Rani L, Kumar M, Kaushik D, et al. A review on the frying process: Methods, models and their mechanism and application in the food industry. Food Res Int. 2023;172:113176. doi:10.1016/j.foodres.2023.113176

Lin PC, Peng CY, Pan CH, et al. Risk of two common glandular cell-type cancers (breast and colorectal cancers) in Chinese occupational chefs: a nationwide ecological study in Taiwan. Int Arch Occup Environ Health. 2021;94(6):1363-1373. doi:10.1007/s00420-021-01673-3 Risk of two common glandular cell-type cancers (breast and colorectal cancers) in Chinese occupational chefs: a nationwide ecological study in Taiwan | SpringerLink  

Xue Y, Jiang Y, Jin S, Li Y. Association between cooking oil fume exposure and lung cancer among Chinese nonsmoking women: a meta-analysis. Onco Targets Ther. 2016;9:2987-2992
https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S100949 

Stott-Miller M, Neuhouser ML, Stanford JL. Consumption of deep-fried foods and risk of prostate cancer. Prostate. 2013;73(9):960-969. doi:10.1002/pros.22643

Ganesan K, Xu B. Deep frying cooking oils promote the high risk of metastases in the breast-A critical review. Food Chem Toxicol. 2020;144:111648. doi:10.1016/j.fct.2020.111648

Rajendran P, Alzahrani AM, Rengarajan T, Veeraraghavan VP, Krishna Mohan S. Consumption of reused vegetable oil intensifies BRCA1 mutations. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 2022;62(5):1222-1229. doi:10.1080/10408398.2020.1837725 Consumption of reused vegetable oil intensifies BRCA1 mutations: Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition: Vol 62, No 5 (tandfonline.com)

Zhong GC, Zhu Q, Gong JP, et al. Fried food consumption and the risk of pancreatic cancer: A large prospective multicenter study. Front Nutr. 2022;9:889303. Published 2022 Jul 22. doi:10.3389/fnut.2022.889303

Reng Q, Zhu LL, Feng L, et al. Dietary meat mutagens intake and cancer risk: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Front Nutr. 2022;9:962688. Published 2022 Sep 23. doi:10.3389/fnut.2022.962688

Chemicals in Meat Cooked at High Temperatures and Cancer Risk - NCI 


 

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