Paleolithic and Mediterranean Diet Scores and Risk of Colorectal Adenoma Pubblico
Valenzuela, Kristine Abigail (2012)
Abstract
Abstract
Paleolithic and Mediterranean Diet Scores and Risk of Colorectal
Adenoma
Background: A Westernized diet and lifestyle is associated
with risk for colorectal cancer and
adenomas. Evolutionary discordance could explain this
association.
Objective: We investigated associations of scores for two
proposed healthy diet patterns, the
"Paleolithic" and Mediterranean diets, with risk for incident,
sporadic colorectal adenomas.
Methods: In the Minnesota Cancer Prevention Research Unit
case-control study of colorectal
polyps, 1,248 participants with no history of colorectal neoplasms
completed extensive
questionnaires, including a Willett food frequency questionnaire,
prior to an elective, outpatient
colonoscopy. Of these participants 564 were identified as cases and
684 as colonoscopy-negative
controls. An additional group of 535 frequency-matched population
controls were also recruited.
Paleolithic and the Mediterranean diet scores were calculated and
categorized into quintiles, and
associations were estimated using unconditional logistic
regression.
Results: The Paleolithic and the Mediterranean diet patterns
were similarly inversely associated
with colorectal adenomas when comparing the cases to the population
controls: the
multivariable-adjusted odds ratios [OR] were 0.66 (95% confidence
interval [CI] 0.45 - 0.96, ptrend
= 0.03) and 0.65 (95% CI 0.44 - 0.96, ptrend = 0.03) for those in
the highest relative to the lowest
quintiles of the Paleolithic and Mediterranean diet scores,
respectively. The associations tended
to be stronger in men (OR 0.51 [95% CI 0.31 - 0.85, ptrend = 0.01]
for the Paleolithic diet score,
and OR 0.60 [95% CI 0.37 - 0.99, ptrend = 0.03] for the
Mediterranean diet score) and those who
were overweight or obese (OR 0.45 [95% CI 0.25 - 0.82, ptrend <
0.01] for the Paleolithic diet
score, and OR 0.41 [95% CI 0.22 - 0.78, ptrend < 0.01] for the
Mediterranean diet score). However,
there was no evidence for an association of either dietary pattern
with risk for adenoma in the
comparisons involving the colonoscopy-negative controls.
Conclusion: These findings suggest that higher adherence to
the Paleolithic or Mediterranean
diet patterns may be similarly associated with lower risk for
incident, sporadic colorectal
adenomas; however, especially considering the discrepant findings
from the comparisons of the
cases with the two different control groups, further study is
needed.
Table of Contents
Paleolithic and Mediterranean Diet Scores and Risk of Colorectal Adenoma
Table of Contents
1- Literature Review
6- Manuscript Chapter
19- Public Health Implications, Possible Future Directions
21- Tables
31- Appendix
39- References
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