Kirsh Victoria A, Peters Ulrike, Mayne Susan T, Subar Amy F, Chatterjee Nilanjan, Johnson Christine C, Hayes Richard B
Research Unit, Division of Preventive Oncology, Cancer Care Ontario, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2007 Aug 1;99(15):1200-9. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djm065. Epub 2007 Jul 24.
Several epidemiologic studies have reported associations between fruit and vegetable intake and reduced risk of prostate cancer, but the findings are inconsistent and data on clinically relevant advanced prostate cancer are limited.
We evaluated the association between prostate cancer risk and intake of fruits and vegetables in 1338 patients with prostate cancer among 29,361 men (average follow-up = 4.2 years) in the screening arm of the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial. Participants completed both a general risk factor and a 137-item food-frequency questionnaire at baseline. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate relative risks (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). All statistical tests were two-sided.
Vegetable and fruit consumption was not related to prostate cancer risk overall; however, risk of extraprostatic prostate cancer (stage III or IV tumors) decreased with increasing vegetable intake (RR = 0.41, 95% CI = 0.22 to 0.74, for high versus low intake; P(trend) = .01). This association was mainly explained by intake of cruciferous vegetables (RR = 0.60, 95% CI = 0.36 to 0.98, for high versus low intake; P(trend) = .02), in particular, broccoli (RR = 0.55, 95% CI = 0.34 to 0.89, for >1 serving per week versus <1 serving per month; P(trend) = .02) and cauliflower (RR = 0.48, 95% CI = 0.25 to 0.89 for >1 serving per week versus <1 serving per month; P(trend) = .03). We found some evidence that risk of aggressive prostate cancer decreased with increasing spinach consumption, but the findings were not consistently statistically significant when restricted to extraprostatic disease.
High intake of cruciferous vegetables, including broccoli and cauliflower, may be associated with reduced risk of aggressive prostate cancer, particularly extraprostatic disease.
多项流行病学研究报告了水果和蔬菜摄入量与前列腺癌风险降低之间的关联,但研究结果并不一致,且关于临床相关晚期前列腺癌的数据有限。
我们在前列腺、肺、结肠和卵巢癌筛查试验的筛查组中,对29361名男性中的1338例前列腺癌患者(平均随访时间 = 4.2年)进行了前列腺癌风险与水果和蔬菜摄入量之间关联的评估。参与者在基线时完成了一份一般风险因素问卷和一份包含137个项目的食物频率问卷。采用Cox比例风险模型来估计相对风险(RRs)和95%置信区间(CIs)。所有统计检验均为双侧检验。
总体而言,蔬菜和水果的消费与前列腺癌风险无关;然而,前列腺外前列腺癌(III期或IV期肿瘤)的风险随着蔬菜摄入量的增加而降低(高摄入量与低摄入量相比,RR = 0.41,95% CI = 0.22至0.74;P趋势 = 0.01)。这种关联主要由十字花科蔬菜的摄入量来解释(高摄入量与低摄入量相比,RR = 0.60,95% CI = 0.36至0.98;P趋势 = 0.02),特别是西兰花(每周食用超过1份与每月食用少于1份相比,RR = 0.55,95% CI = 0.34至0.89;P趋势 = 0.02)和菜花(每周食用超过1份与每月食用少于1份相比,RR = 0.48,95% CI = 0.25至0.89;P趋势 = 0.03)。我们发现一些证据表明侵袭性前列腺癌的风险随着菠菜消费量的增加而降低,但仅限于前列腺外疾病时,这些发现并不总是具有统计学显著性。
高摄入十字花科蔬菜,包括西兰花和菜花,可能与侵袭性前列腺癌风险降低有关,尤其是前列腺外疾病。