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Data from Intake of Dietary Fruit, Vegetables, and Fiber and Risk of Colorectal Cancer According to Molecular Subtypes: A Pooled Analysis of 9 Studies

Posted on 2023-03-31 - 03:44
Abstract

Protective associations of fruits, vegetables, and fiber intake with colorectal cancer risk have been shown in many, but not all epidemiologic studies. One possible reason for study heterogeneity is that dietary factors may have distinct effects by colorectal cancer molecular subtypes. Here, we investigate the association of fruit, vegetables, and fiber intake with four well-established colorectal cancer molecular subtypes separately and in combination. Nine observational studies including 9,592 cases with molecular subtypes for microsatellite instability (MSI), CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP), and somatic mutations in BRAF and KRAS genes, and 7,869 controls were analyzed. Both case-only logistic regression analyses and polytomous logistic regression analyses (with one control set and multiple case groups) were used. Higher fruit intake was associated with a trend toward decreased risk of BRAF-mutated tumors [OR 4th vs. 1st quartile = 0.82 (95% confidence interval, 0.65–1.04)] but not BRAF-wildtype tumors [1.09 (0.97–1.22); P difference as shown in case-only analysis = 0.02]. This difference was observed in case–control studies and not in cohort studies. Compared with controls, higher fiber intake showed negative association with colorectal cancer risk for cases with microsatellite stable/MSI-low, CIMP-negative, BRAF-wildtype, and KRAS-wildtype tumors (Ptrend range from 0.03 to 3.4e-03), which is consistent with the traditional adenoma-colorectal cancer pathway. These negative associations were stronger compared with MSI-high, CIMP-positive, BRAF-mutated, or KRAS-mutated tumors, but the differences were not statistically significant. These inverse associations for fruit and fiber intake may explain, in part, inconsistent findings between fruit or fiber intake and colorectal cancer risk that have previously been reported.

Significance:

These analyses by colorectal cancer molecular subtypes potentially explain the inconsistent findings between dietary fruit or fiber intake and overall colorectal cancer risk that have previously been reported.

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FUNDING

Uehara Memorial Foundation

National Cancer Institute

National Institutes of Health, U.S

Department of Health and Human Services

Center for Inherited Disease Research

National Eye Institute

NIH

NCI

Seattle

Mayo Clinic

International Agency for Research on Cancer

Danish Cancer Society

Ligue Contre le Cancer

Institut Gustave Roussy

Mutuelle Générale de l'Education Nationale

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale

German Cancer Aid

German Cancer Research Center

Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Deutsche Krebshilfe

Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum and Federal Ministry of Education and Research

World Cancer Research

Nordforsk

Health Research Fund

ISCIII RETIC

Swedish Cancer Society

Swedish Research Council and County Councils of Skåne

Västerbotten

Australian NHMRC

Cancer Council Victoria

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

National Cancer Institute of Canada

Swedish Research Council

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AUTHORS (42)

  • Akihisa Hidaka
    Tabitha A. Harrison
    Yin Cao
    Lori C. Sakoda
    Richard Barfield
    Marios Giannakis
    Mingyang Song
    Amanda I. Phipps
    Jane C. Figueiredo
    Syed H. Zaidi
    Amanda E. Toland
    Efrat L. Amitay
    Sonja I. Berndt
    Ivan Borozan
    Andrew T. Chan
    Steven Gallinger
    Marc J. Gunter
    Mark A. Guinter
    Sophia Harlid
    Heather Hampel
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