Dietary patterns and colorectal cancer: systematic review and meta-analysis

Studies on the association between single foods or nutrients and colorectal cancer have provided inconsistent results. Previous reviews did not conduct a quantitative synthesis of the relation with dietary patterns. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies addressing the association between dietary patterns and colorectal cancer. Studies quantifying the association between dietary patterns (defined a posteriori) and colorectal cancer were identified in PubMed (until 01.08.2010) and through backward and forward citation tracking (ISI Web of Science and Scopus). Summary relative risk (RR) estimates and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were computed for highest versus lowest levels of exposure, for colon cancer (CC) and rectal cancer (RC), and for proximal and distal CC, by random effects meta-analysis. Heterogeneity was quantified using the I2 statistic. Eight cohort and eight case–control studies defining patterns through principal components and factor analyses were included in the systematic review. Meta-analyses were conducted for three patterns: (i) ‘drinker,’ characterized by high alcohol consumption (CC: RRcombined=0.96, 95% CI: 0.82–1.12, I2=0.6%; RC: RRcombined=0.83, 95% CI: 0.47–1.45, I2=65.1%); (ii) ‘healthy,’ characterized by high fruit/vegetables consumption (CC: RRcombined=0.80, 95% CI: 0.70–0.90, I2=55.1%; RC: RRcombined=1.02, 95% CI: 0.89–1.17, I2=10.8%); (iii) ‘western,’ characterized by high red/processed meat consumption (CC: RRcombined=1.29, 95% CI: 1.13–1.48, I2=31.7%; RC: RRcombined=1.13, 95% CI: 0.92–1.39, I2=40.6%). Summary estimates for proximal and distal CC were similar. The risk of CC was increased with patterns characterized by high intake of red and processed meat and decreased with those labelled as ‘healthy.’ No significant associations were observed for RC.

[1]  P. Ghadirian,et al.  Associated nutritional risk of breast and colon cancers: a population-based case-control study in Montreal, Canada. , 2005, Cancer letters.

[2]  G. Smith,et al.  Bias in meta-analysis detected by a simple, graphical test , 1997, BMJ.

[3]  Y. Kakeji,et al.  Dietary patterns and colorectal cancer in a Japanese population: The Fukuoka Colorectal Cancer Study , 2010, British Journal of Nutrition.

[4]  R. Sandler,et al.  Dietary Patterns, Food Groups, and Rectal Cancer Risk in Whites and African-Americans , 2009, Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention.

[5]  Victor Kipnis,et al.  Dietary patterns as identified by factor analysis and colorectal cancer among middle-aged Americans. , 2008, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[6]  W. Willett,et al.  Major dietary patterns and the risk of colorectal cancer in women. , 2003, Archives of internal medicine.

[7]  S. Tsugane,et al.  Dietary patterns and subsequent colorectal cancer risk by subsite: A prospective cohort study , 2005, International journal of cancer.

[8]  S. Graham,et al.  Dietary patterns and colon cancer in western New York. , 1992, Nutrition and cancer.

[9]  M. Schulze,et al.  Can dietary patterns help us detect diet–disease associations? , 2005, Nutrition Research Reviews.

[10]  Abelardo Avila-Curiel,et al.  Food, nutrition and the prevention of cancer: a global perspective , 1998 .

[11]  M. McCredie,et al.  Cancer epidemiology in migrant populations. , 1998, Recent results in cancer research. Fortschritte der Krebsforschung. Progres dans les recherches sur le cancer.

[12]  Christopher F. Martin,et al.  Dietary Patterns and Colon Cancer Risk in Whites and African Americans in the North Carolina Colon Cancer Study , 2009, Nutrition and cancer.

[13]  P. Brennan,et al.  Dietary patterns and risk of cancer: A factor analysis in Uruguay , 2009, International journal of cancer.

[14]  M. Shike,et al.  Diet and lifestyle in the prevention of colorectal cancer: an overview. , 1999, The American journal of medicine.

[15]  W. Koh,et al.  Prospective study of dietary patterns and colorectal cancer among Singapore Chinese , 2008, British Journal of Cancer.

[16]  Jonathan J Deeks,et al.  META‐ANALYSIS, DECISION ANALYSIS AND COST‐EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS: METHODS FOR QUANTITATIVE SYNTHESIS IN MEDICINE. , 1996 .

[17]  T. Hakulinen,et al.  Cancer incidence in estonian migrants to Sweden , 1993, International journal of cancer.

[18]  E. Rimm,et al.  Dietary patterns and risk of colon cancer and adenoma in a cohort of men (United States) , 2004, Cancer Causes & Control.

[19]  F B Hu,et al.  Prospective study of major dietary patterns and colorectal cancer risk in women. , 2001, American journal of epidemiology.

[20]  T. Hartman,et al.  Dietary Patterns and Colorectal Adenoma and Cancer Risk: A Review of the Epidemiological Evidence , 2010, Nutrition and cancer.

[21]  J. Faivre,et al.  [Primary prevention of colorectal cancer]. , 1995, Bulletin du cancer.

[22]  Mark Woodward,et al.  The impact of dietary and lifestyle risk factors on risk of colorectal cancer: A quantitative overview of the epidemiological evidence , 2009, International journal of cancer.

[23]  R. Sinha,et al.  Diet index-based and empirically derived dietary patterns are associated with colorectal cancer risk. , 2010, The Journal of nutrition.

[24]  Eva Negri,et al.  Nutrient dietary patterns and the risk of colorectal cancer: a case–control study from Italy , 2010, Cancer Causes & Control.

[25]  C. Begg,et al.  Operating characteristics of a rank correlation test for publication bias. , 1994, Biometrics.

[26]  M. Slattery Diet, lifestyle, and colon cancer. , 2000, Seminars in gastrointestinal disease.

[27]  J. Faivre,et al.  Dietary patterns and the adenomacarcinoma sequence of colorectal cancer , 2005, European journal of nutrition.

[28]  C. la Vecchia,et al.  Dietary patterns and the risk of colorectal cancer and adenomas. , 2010, Nutrition reviews.

[29]  F. Clavel-Chapelon,et al.  Dietary patterns and risk of colorectal tumors: a cohort of French women of the National Education System (E3N). , 2006, American journal of epidemiology.

[30]  Vittorio Krogh,et al.  Dietary patterns associated with colon and rectal cancer: results from the Dietary Patterns and Cancer (DIETSCAN) Project. , 2004, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[31]  Julian Peto,et al.  Cancer epidemiology in the last century and the next decade , 2001, Nature.

[32]  M. Pike,et al.  Correlation of Dietary Intake and Colorectal Cancer Incidence Among Mexican-American Migrants: The Multiethnic Cohort Study , 2003, Nutrition and cancer.

[33]  Dan Jackson,et al.  Extending DerSimonian and Laird's methodology to perform multivariate random effects meta‐analyses , 2009, Statistics in medicine.

[34]  John D. Potter,et al.  Food, nutrition and the prevention of cancer : a global perspective , 2001 .

[35]  S. Thompson,et al.  Quantifying heterogeneity in a meta‐analysis , 2002, Statistics in medicine.

[36]  E. Riboli,et al.  The second expert report, Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity and the Prevention of Cancer: A Global Perspective , 2007 .

[37]  A F Subar,et al.  Associations between food patterns defined by cluster analysis and colorectal cancer incidence in the NIH–AARP diet and health study , 2009, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[38]  J. Potter,et al.  Eating patterns and risk of colon cancer. , 1998, American journal of epidemiology.

[39]  廣畑 富雄,et al.  Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity, and the Prevention of Cancer: a Global Perspective , 2007 .