Egnell Manon, Fassier Philippine, Lécuyer Lucie, Zelek Laurent, Vasson Marie-Paule, Hercberg Serge, Latino-Martel Paule, Galan Pilar, Deschasaux Mélanie, Touvier Mathilde
Sorbonne Paris Cité Epidemiology and Statistics Research Center (CRESS), Inserm U1153, Inra U1125, Cnam, Paris 13 University, Nutritional Epidemiology Research Team (EREN), 74 rue Marcel Cachin, 93017 Bobigny, France.
French Network for Nutrition and Cancer Research (NACRe Network), 78352 Jouy-en-Josas, France.
Nutrients. 2017 May 13;9(5):488. doi: 10.3390/nu9050488.
Experimental studies suggest a protective effect of B-vitamins on breast cancer risk, potentially modulated by alcohol intake. However, epidemiological studies are limited, especially regarding non-folate B-vitamins. Furthermore, few studies included quantitative assessment of supplemental intake. This prospective study aimed to investigate the associations between intakes of B-vitamins (dietary, supplemental, total) and breast cancer risk. 27,853 women aged ≥45 years from the NutriNet-Santé cohort (2009-2016) were included, with a median follow-up time of 4.2 years. Dietary data were collected using repeated 24 h records. A specific questionnaire assessed dietary supplement use over a 12-month period. A composition database of 8000 supplements was developed. Associations were characterized by multivariable Cox models, and 462 incident breast cancers were diagnosed. Dietary (HR = 0.74 (0.55, 0.99), -trend = 0.05), supplemental (HR = 0.61 (0.38, 0.98), -trend = 0.05), and total (HR = 0.67 (0.50, 0.91), -trend = 0.01) pyridoxine intakes were inversely associated with breast cancer risk. Total thiamin intake was borderline inversely associated with breast cancer risk (HR = 0.78 (0.61, 1.00), = 0.05). Statistically significant interactions between alcohol consumption and B-vitamin (thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, pantothenic acid, pyridoxine, folate, and cobalamin) supplemental intake were observed, the latter being inversely associated with breast cancer risk in non-to-low alcohol drinkers but not in higher drinkers. This large prospective study, including quantitative assessment of supplemental intake, suggests a potential protective effect of pyridoxine and thiamin on breast cancer risk in middle-aged women.
实验研究表明,B族维生素对乳腺癌风险具有保护作用,这种作用可能受酒精摄入量的调节。然而,流行病学研究有限,尤其是关于非叶酸B族维生素的研究。此外,很少有研究对补充剂摄入量进行定量评估。这项前瞻性研究旨在调查B族维生素(膳食、补充剂、总摄入量)的摄入量与乳腺癌风险之间的关联。纳入了NutriNet-Santé队列(2009 - 2016年)中27853名年龄≥45岁的女性,中位随访时间为4.2年。使用重复的24小时记录收集膳食数据。一份特定问卷评估了12个月期间的膳食补充剂使用情况。建立了一个包含8000种补充剂的成分数据库。通过多变量Cox模型对关联进行特征分析,共诊断出462例新发乳腺癌病例。膳食吡哆醇摄入量(风险比[HR]=0.74(0.55,0.99),-趋势=0.05)、补充剂吡哆醇摄入量(HR = 0.61(0.38,0.98),-趋势=0.05)和总吡哆醇摄入量(HR = 0.67(0.50,0.91),-趋势=0.01)与乳腺癌风险呈负相关。硫胺素总摄入量与乳腺癌风险呈临界负相关(HR = 0.78(0.61,1.00),P = 0.05)。观察到酒精消费与B族维生素(硫胺素、核黄素、烟酸、泛酸、吡哆醇、叶酸和钴胺素)补充剂摄入量之间存在统计学上的显著交互作用,后者在非至低酒精饮酒者中与乳腺癌风险呈负相关,而在高酒精饮酒者中则不然。这项大型前瞻性研究,包括对补充剂摄入量的定量评估,表明吡哆醇和硫胺素对中年女性乳腺癌风险可能具有保护作用。