He noted that this is an observational study, and can’t actually prove that fecal blood is a cause of death or a sign of other diseases.

Steele speculated, however, that inflammation in the body may produce bleeding in the bowel. Evidence exists that many cancers and Alzheimer’s disease develop when chronic systemic inflammation exists, he said.

One U.S. expert agreed with this observation.

“Inflammation is related to excess weight, insulin resistance, lack of exercise and poor diet,” said Dr. Marc Siegel, a clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City.

For the study, the researchers collected data on more than 134,000 people, ages 50 to 74, who were screened for colon cancer in Scotland from March 2000 through March 2016.

More than 2,700 had blood in their feces, the researchers found. They tracked the participants’ survival until death or the end of March 2016, whichever came first.

People with blood in their stool were nearly eight times as likely to die of colon cancer as those without it.

But fecal blood was also linked with a 58 percent higher risk of dying from any cause other than colon cancer, the researchers said.

Being older, poor and male raised the odds for blood in the feces. So did use of aspirin or other blood thinners, the researchers found.

The report was published online July 16 in the journal Gut.

Dr. Uri Ladabaum is a professor of medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.

He said use of the fecal occult blood test should be restricted to colon cancer screening.

“Testing for hidden blood in the stool can find early colorectal cancer or pre-cancer, leading to decreased risk of colorectal cancer death,” said Ladabaum, who wrote an editorial accompanying the study.

“It seems likely that what it tells us about non-colorectal health might be gleaned also from other pieces of information about a patient,” he said.

Ladabaum doesn’t believe the study findings should affect current practice.

Ladabaum said he hopes primary care doctors can become aware of these risks through routine patient care. They can then manage them through weight control, diet, exercise, diabetes treatment and smoking cessation.

Credit: WEB MD