Inserm (National Institute of Health and Medical Research), U557 Nutritional Epidemiology Unit, 93017 Bobigny, France.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2013 Jan;137(1):225-36. doi: 10.1007/s10549-012-2323-y. Epub 2012 Nov 7.
Studies of the association between polyphenols dietary intake and breast cancer risk have been limited due to the lack of detailed food composition tables. In addition, none has examined this association according to alcohol intake, despite the facts that alcohol is an established risk factor for breast cancer and that the contribution of alcoholic beverages to polyphenol intake varies according to the level of alcohol consumption. Our objectives were (1) to estimate the associations between breast cancer risk and a wide range of dietary polyphenols using the recently published Phenol-Explorer database; and (2) to evaluate if/how alcohol intake modulates these relationships. 4,141 women from the SU.VI.MAX prospective cohort were followed from 1994 to 2007 (median followup: 12.6 years); 152 developed a first incident invasive primary breast cancer. Dietary intakes were assessed by repeated 24-h records. The Phenol-Explorer database was used to estimate polyphenol intake. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards models were used to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95 % confidence intervals (CIs) for quartiles of polyphenol intake. Analyses were stratified by median alcohol intake (< vs. ≥ 6.5 g/d). In non-to-low alcohol drinkers, intakes of some classes of polyphenols were associated with decreased breast cancer risk: hydroxybenzoic acids (HR(Q4vsQ1) = 0.38, 95 % CI: 0.17-0.86, P (trend) = 0.005), flavonoids (0.35, 0.17-0.75, P (trend) = 0.02), flavonols (0.36, 0.18-0.74, P (trend) = 0.002), catechins (0.48, 0.22-1.05, P (trend) = 0.02), theaflavins (0.42, 0.19-0.93, P (trend) = 0.02), and proanthocyanidins (0.39, 0.18-0.84, P (trend) = 0.02). In contrast, in women with higher alcohol use, intakes of hydroxybenzoic acids (2.28, 1.16-4.49, P (trend) = 0.04), flavonoids (2.46, 1.23-4.92, P (trend) = 0.01), anthocyanins (2.94, 1.32-6.53, P (trend) = 0.01), catechins (2.28, 1.19-4.36, P (trend) = 0.02), and proanthocyanidins (2.98, 1.40-6.33, P (trend) = 0.006) were associated with increased breast cancer risk. In conclusion, this prospective study suggests that several classes of polyphenols could potentially contribute to breast cancer prevention among non-to-low alcohol drinkers, but some may increase breast cancer risk among women with higher alcohol intake.
由于缺乏详细的食物成分表,关于多酚类物质的饮食摄入与乳腺癌风险之间的关联的研究受到限制。此外,尽管酒精是乳腺癌的既定风险因素,并且酒精饮料对多酚类物质摄入的贡献因酒精摄入量的不同而有所不同,但没有研究根据酒精摄入量来研究这种关联。我们的目标是:(1) 使用最近发布的 Phenol-Explorer 数据库来估计广泛的饮食多酚类物质与乳腺癌风险之间的关联;(2) 评估酒精摄入量是否/如何调节这些关系。1994 年至 2007 年期间,共有 4141 名来自 SU.VI.MAX 前瞻性队列的女性接受了随访(中位随访时间:12.6 年);其中 152 人首次确诊为浸润性原发性乳腺癌。通过重复的 24 小时记录来评估饮食摄入量。使用 Phenol-Explorer 数据库来估计多酚类物质的摄入量。多变量 Cox 比例风险模型用于计算四分位数的多酚类物质摄入量的风险比(HR)和 95%置信区间(CI)。分析按中位数酒精摄入量(< vs. ≥ 6.5 g/d)进行分层。在非大量饮酒者和低饮酒者中,一些类别的多酚类物质的摄入与乳腺癌风险降低有关:羟基苯甲酸(HR(Q4vsQ1)=0.38,95%CI:0.17-0.86,P(趋势)=0.005)、类黄酮(0.35,0.17-0.75,P(趋势)=0.02)、类黄酮醇(0.36,0.18-0.74,P(趋势)=0.002)、儿茶素(0.48,0.22-1.05,P(趋势)=0.02)、茶黄素(0.42,0.19-0.93,P(趋势)=0.02)和原花青素(0.39,0.18-0.84,P(趋势)=0.02)。相比之下,在饮酒量较高的女性中,羟基苯甲酸(2.28,1.16-4.49,P(趋势)=0.04)、类黄酮(2.46,1.23-4.92,P(趋势)=0.01)、花青素(2.94,1.32-6.53,P(趋势)=0.01)、儿茶素(2.28,1.19-4.36,P(趋势)=0.02)和原花青素(2.98,1.40-6.33,P(趋势)=0.006)与乳腺癌风险增加有关。总之,这项前瞻性研究表明,某些类别的多酚类物质可能有助于预防非大量饮酒者的乳腺癌,但某些物质可能会增加饮酒量较高的女性患乳腺癌的风险。