Mediterranean diet and risk of breast cancer: An umbrella review
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Breast cancer Mediterranean diet Umbrella review
Fecha
2023-04Referencia bibliográfica
C. González-Palacios Torres, R. Barrios-Rodríguez, C. Muñoz-Bravo et al. Mediterranean diet and risk of breast cancer: An umbrella review. Clinical Nutrition 42 (2023) 600e608[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clnu.2023.02.012]
Patrocinador
Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Con- ocimiento y Universidades of the Junta de Andalucía for the grant received (PREDOC_00551); Universidad de Málaga / Consorcio de Bibliotecas Universitarias de Andalucía (CBUA) for funding the Open Access fees for the publicationResumen
Background: The Mediterranean Diet (MedDiet) is a healthy dietary pattern which has been related to a
lower risk of certain chronic diseases, such as some cancers. However, its role in breast cancer development
remains unclear. This umbrella review aims to summarize the highest available evidence on
MedDiet and breast cancer risk.
Methods: Pubmed, Web of Science, and Scopus electronic platforms were searched for relevant systematic
reviews and meta-analyses. The selection criteria included systematic reviews with or without
meta-analysis including women aged 18 years or older which evaluated the adherence to a MedDiet as
the exposure and incidence of breast cancer as the outcome variable. Overlapping and quality of the
reviews using AMSTAR-2 tool were independently assessed by two authors.
Results: Five systematic reviews and six systematic reviews with meta-analysis were included. Overall, 4
systematic reviews e two with and two without meta-analysis e were rated as of high quality. An inverse
association was found in 5 of the 9 reviews which evaluated the role of MedDiet on the risk of total
breast cancer. The meta-analyses showed moderate-high heterogeneity. The risk reduction seemed to be
more consistent among postmenopausal women. No association was found for MedDiet among premenopausal
women.
Conclusions: The results of this umbrella review suggest that adherence to a MedDiet pattern had a
protective effect on the risk of breast cancer, especially for postmenopausal breast cancer. The stratification
of breast cancer cases and conducting high-quality reviews are aspects needed to overcome the
current results’ heterogeneity and to improve knowledge in this field