Willett W C
Department of Nutrition and Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2001 Jan;10(1):3-8.
The large differences in cancer rates among countries, striking changes in these rates among migrating populations, and rapid changes over time within countries indicate that some aspect of lifestyle or environment is largely responsible for the common cancers in Western countries. Dietary fat has been hypothesized to be the key factor because national consumption is correlated with the international differences, but these correlations are potentially confounded by other aspects of Western lifestyles. Detailed analyses in large prospective studies have not supported an important role of dietary fat. Instead, positive energy balance, reflected in early age at menarche and weight gain as an adult, is an important determinant of breast and colon cancers, consistent with numerous studies in animals. Physical inactivity has also been shown to be a risk factor for these diseases, and in part accounts for the international differences in cancer rates. Although the percentage of calories from fat in the diet does not appear related to risk of colon cancer, greater risks have been seen with higher consumption of red meat, suggesting that factors other than fat per se may be important. In many case-control studies a high consumption of fruits and vegetables has been associated with reduced risks of numerous cancers, but recent prospective studies suggest these associations may have been overstated. Among the factors in fruits and vegetables that have been examined in relation to cancer risk, present data most strongly support a benefit of higher folic acid consumption in reducing risks of colon and breast cancers. These findings have been bolstered by an association between incidence of colon cancer and a polymorphism in the gene for methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, an enzyme involved in folic acid metabolism. The benefits of folic acid appear strongest among persons who regularly consume alcohol, which itself is associated with risk of these cancers. Numerous other aspects of diet are hypothesized to influence the risks of cancers in Western countries, but for the moment the evidence is unclear. Two decades of effort in developing, evaluating, and refining methods of dietary assessment have laid the groundwork for further insights into the role of diet in cancer etiology that will emerge from the more than 30 large prospective studies that are currently underway.
各国癌症发病率存在巨大差异,移民人群的发病率发生显著变化,且各国国内发病率随时间快速改变,这表明生活方式或环境的某些方面在很大程度上导致了西方国家常见癌症的发生。有人推测膳食脂肪是关键因素,因为国家层面的消费量与国际差异相关,但这些相关性可能会被西方生活方式的其他方面所混淆。大型前瞻性研究的详细分析并未支持膳食脂肪起重要作用这一观点。相反,初潮年龄早和成年后体重增加所反映的正能量平衡是乳腺癌和结肠癌的重要决定因素,这与众多动物研究结果一致。身体活动不足也已被证明是这些疾病的一个风险因素,部分解释了癌症发病率的国际差异。尽管饮食中脂肪的热量百分比似乎与结肠癌风险无关,但红肉消费量较高时风险更大,这表明脂肪本身以外的因素可能很重要。在许多病例对照研究中,大量食用水果和蔬菜与多种癌症风险降低有关,但最近的前瞻性研究表明这些关联可能被夸大了。在与癌症风险相关的水果和蔬菜因素中,目前的数据最有力地支持了较高叶酸摄入量在降低结肠癌和乳腺癌风险方面的益处。结肠癌发病率与参与叶酸代谢的亚甲基四氢叶酸还原酶基因多态性之间的关联进一步支持了这些发现。叶酸的益处似乎在经常饮酒的人群中最为明显,而饮酒本身与这些癌症的风险相关。人们推测饮食的许多其他方面会影响西方国家癌症的风险,但目前证据尚不明确。二十年来在开发、评估和完善膳食评估方法方面所做的努力,为进一步深入了解饮食在癌症病因学中的作用奠定了基础,目前正在进行的30多项大型前瞻性研究将带来这方面的更多见解。