Associations between Dietary Patterns and Incident Colorectal Cancer in 114,443 Individuals from the UK Biobank: A Prospective Cohort Study
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L. Skulsky, Samuel; A. Koutoukidis, Dimitrios; L. Carter, Jennifer; Piernas Sánchez, Carmen María; A. Jebb, Susan; Gao, Min; M Astbury, NerysEditorial
American Association for Cancer Research
Fecha
2024-10-01Referencia bibliográfica
Skulsky, S. et. al. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev (2024) 33 (11): 1445–1455.. [https://doi.org/10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-24-0048]
Patrocinador
National Institute for Health and Care Research Advanced Fellowship (NIHR302549); Grants RYC2020-028818-I, MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033, and “ESF Investing in Your Future” (Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain)Resumen
Background: Diet–disease association studies increasingly use
dietary patterns (DP) to account for the complexity of the exposure.
We assessed if a DP associated with type 2 diabetes
mellitus, cardiovascular disease, and all-cause mortality is also
associated with colorectal cancer.
Methods: We used reduced rank regression on 24-hour recall
data to identify DPs, explaining the maximum variation in four
nutrient-response variables: energy density, saturated fatty acids,
free sugars, and fiber density. Cox proportional hazards models
examined prospective associations between DP adherence (coded
in a continuous scale as z-scores as well as in quintiles) and
incident colorectal cancer. Subgroup analyses were conducted for
tumor site, age, and sex.
Results: After exclusions, 1,089 colorectal cancer cases occurred
in 114,443 participants over a median follow-up of 8.0
years. DP1 was characterized by increased intake of chocolate and
confectionery; butter; low-fiber bread; red and processed meats;
and alcohol, as well as low intake of fruits, vegetables, and highfiber
cereals. After accounting for confounders, including body
mass, there were positive linear associations between DP1 and
incident overall colorectal cancer (HR of quintile 5 vs. 1, 1.34;
95% confidence interval, 1.16–1.53, Ptrend ¼ 0.005) and rectal
cancer (HR of quintile 5 vs. 1, 1.58; 95% confidence interval,
1.27–1.96, Ptrend ¼ 0.009) but not for proximal or distal colon
cancers. No DP2–colorectal cancer association was observed.
Conclusions: A DP previously associated with cardiometabolic
disease is also associated with incident colorectal cancer, especially
rectal cancers.
Impact: These consistent associations of particular food
groups with both cardiometabolic disease and this diet-related
cancer strengthen the evidence base for holistic population dietary
guidelines to prevent ill-health.