Canadian Universities Unite for Groundbreaking UPFront Study on Diet and Cancer
A multi-provincial collaboration of leading Canadian researchers has secured $2 million in funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to probe the connections between ultra-processed foods (UPFs), the gut microbiome, and colorectal cancer risk. Known as the UPFront study—short for Ultra-processed Foods and canceR: advancing evidence ON The biological plausibility Through the gut microbiome—this five-year project is led by Dr. Rachel Murphy, a senior scientist at BC Cancer Research Centre and associate professor at the University of British Columbia (UBC). Co-principal investigators include Dr. Sharon Kirkpatrick from the University of Waterloo, Dr. Benoît Lamarche from Université Laval, and Dr. Kathy McCoy from the University of Calgary.
This initiative builds on Canada's largest population health cohort, the Canadian Partnership for Tomorrow's Health (CanPath), integrating vast dietary datasets from the HEAL study and biospecimens from CHARM. By bridging population-level data with experimental models, UPFront aims to clarify if UPFs drive colorectal cancer and pinpoint the responsible culprits—be it high fat, sugar, salt, or additives like emulsifiers.
Rising Colorectal Cancer Rates in Canada Demand Urgent Answers
Colorectal cancer remains the fourth most commonly diagnosed cancer in Canada, claiming lives as the second leading cause of cancer death among men and third among women. Alarmingly, early-onset cases—diagnosed before age 50—are surging, with models projecting a doubling every 15 years in Canada, mirroring trends in the U.S. and Australia. Traditional risk factors like age, family history, and smoking fail to fully explain this shift, turning attention to modern dietary patterns.
In Canada, colorectal cancer screening now begins at age 50 in many provinces, but the youth epidemic underscores the need for prevention. UPFront positions Canadian universities at the forefront, leveraging their expertise to dissect these trends and foster healthier futures.
Defining Ultra-Processed Foods: Pervasive in Canadian Diets
Ultra-processed foods, classified by the NOVA system as industrially formulated products with additives like emulsifiers, flavors, and stabilizers, dominate Canadian grocery carts. Examples include sodas, packaged snacks, instant noodles, and ready-meals. Nearly all Canadian adults (99%) consume them weekly, comprising up to 50% of preschoolers' calories and a third of heart disease burden.
- Chocolate, chips, cold cereals, and sugary drinks top consumption lists.
- Statistics Canada data shows UPFs surged post-2015, linked to convenience amid busy lifestyles.
- Low-income and marginalized groups face higher exposure, exacerbating inequities.
While affordable upfront, long-term health costs—from obesity to cancer—burden Canada's system. For aspiring researchers, studying UPFs offers paths in public health nutrition at institutions like Waterloo or UBC.
UPFs in Everyday Canadian Life
From Tim Hortons donuts to frozen pizzas, UPFs fill pantries. A 2025 study found toddlers with high UPF intake show subtle behavioral shifts, hinting at early microbiome disruptions. UPFront will quantify these in CRC contexts.
Emerging Evidence: UPFs and Colorectal Cancer Precursors
Global studies, including a 2025 JAMA Oncology analysis, link high UPF intake to 45% higher risk of precancerous polyps in women under 50. French NutriNet-Santé data tied UPFs to overall CRC risk, independent of other diets. Yet, causality remains elusive—do UPFs promote adenomas via inflammation or microbiome shifts?
Canadian data aligns: Modeling predicts CRC doubling in youth, paralleling UPF rises. UPFront fills gaps by testing mechanisms, vital for policy like front-of-pack labeling starting 2026.Health Canada NOVA guidelines
The Gut Microbiome: Key Mediator in Cancer Pathways?
The gut microbiome—trillions of microbes aiding digestion, immunity—may bridge UPFs to CRC. Emulsifiers like polysorbate 80 disrupt mucus layers, fostering pathogens like pks+ E. coli, CRC promoters. High-fat UPFs alter bile acids, inflaming colons.
- Studies show UPF-fed mice develop tumors via dysbiosis.
- Human data links low fiber (UPF hallmark) to reduced protective bacteria.
- UPFront tests additives vs. nutrients in microbiome shifts.
Dr. McCoy's Calgary team excels in microbiome-host interactions, enhancing UPFront's rigor.
UPFront's Innovative Multi-Level Approach
UPFront integrates:
| Level | Components |
|---|---|
| Population | HEAL diets (largest Canadian dataset), CHARM biospecimens from equity groups. |
| Feeding Studies | Controlled UPF trials assessing microbiome changes. |
| Lab Models | Mouse CRC models, gut organoids testing emulsifiers. |
This spans cells to society, partnering with Heart & Stroke and Health Canada for policy impact.
Spotlight on Trailblazing Researchers and Institutions
Dr. Murphy (UBC/BC Cancer) pioneers diet-cancer links via CanPath. Kirkpatrick (Waterloo) leads HEAL/CHARM, advancing equity-focused nutrition. Lamarche (Laval) decodes food matrices; McCoy (Calgary) unravels microbiome immunity.
International ties (Pasteur, Paris Cité) bolster. For students, explore higher-ed jobs in these labs or career advice in cancer epidemiology.
Photo by Dora Dalberto on Unsplash
Public Health Implications for Canadians
Findings could reshape guidelines, targeting UPF additives for regulation. With CRC costs soaring, prevention saves billions. Equity focus addresses Indigenous, low-SES disparities.
Actionable: Swap UPFs for whole foods; support labeling. Ties to Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month 2026: equity continuum.Canadian Cancer Society on UPFront
Future Horizons: From Research to Prevention Revolution
UPFront, among 19 CIHR teams ($41M total), pioneers biology-driven prevention. Expect microbiome-targeted interventions, personalized diets. For academics, opportunities abound in university jobs, faculty positions.
Dr. Murphy notes: “Diet is actionable—UPFront guides choices.” Stay informed via Rate My Professor for mentors, higher-ed career advice.






