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Original Articles

Food Groups and Nutrient Intake and Risk of Colorectal Cancer: A Hospital-Based Case-Control Study in Spain

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Pages 386-392 | Received 08 Nov 2011, Accepted 01 Jan 2012, Published online: 27 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

Although evidence supports that colorectal cancer (CRC) has an environmental etiology, the potential influence of diet appears to be one of the most important components. We studied the relation between food groups and nutrient intake and the risk of CRC. A hospital-based case-control study was conducted in Spain between 2007 and 2009. The authors matched 245 patients with incident histologically confirmed CRC by age, gender, and date of admission with 490 controls. Information about nutrient intake was gathered by using a semiquantitative frequency food questionnaire. Univariate analysis was done with individual food items. Odds ratios (ORs) for consecutive tertiles of nutrient intake were computed after allowance for sociodemographic variables and consumption of food groups. Vitamin B6 (OR: 0.26), vitamin D (OR: 0.45), vitamin E (OR: 0.42), polyunsaturated fatty acids (OR: 0.57), and fiber (OR: 0.40) were inversely associated with CRC, whereas carbohydrates (OR: 1.82) were significantly associated with CRC risk for the upper tertile. In multivariate analysis adjusting for major covariables (energy, age, and gender), vitamin D (OR:0.45), vitamin E (OR:0.36), and fiber (OR:0.46) remained associated with CRC. Data suggest that the etiology of colorectal cancer is not due to lifestyle and dietary patterns being important the effect of single nutrients.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Dr. C. Valls-Llobet for its support in the research and valuable comments and Dr. M. A. Navarro for his time and dedication to the study.

This work was possible thanks to Fundación Olga Torres for Prevention on Colorectal cancer. M. Banqué was supported by a predoctoral fellowship on grant.

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