Miranti Eugenia H, Stolzenberg-Solomon Rachael, Weinstein Stephanie J, Selhub Jacob, Männistö Satu, Taylor Philip R, Freedman Neal D, Albanes Demetrius, Abnet Christian C, Murphy Gwen
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts.
Int J Cancer. 2017 Sep 15;141(6):1120-1129. doi: 10.1002/ijc.30809. Epub 2017 Jun 21.
Previous studies have found associations between one-carbon metabolism nutrients and risk of several cancers, but little is known regarding upper gastrointestinal tract (UGI) cancer. We analyzed prediagnostic serum concentrations of several one-carbon metabolism nutrients (vitamin B12, folate, vitamin B6, riboflavin and homocysteine) in a nested case-control study within the Alpha-Tocopherol, Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention (ATBC) Study of male smokers, which was undertaken in Finland between 1985 and 1988. We conducted a nested case-control study including 127 noncardia gastric adenocarcinoma (NCGA), 41 esophagogastric junctional adenocarcinoma and 60 esophageal squamous cell carcinoma incident cases identified within ATBC. Controls were matched to cases on age, date of serum collection and follow-up time. One-carbon nutrient concentrations were measured in fasting serum samples collected at baseline (up to 17 years prior to cancer diagnosis). Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated using conditional logistic regression. Lower prediagnostic vitamin B12 concentrations at baseline were associated with a 5.8-fold increased risk of NCGA (95% CI = 2.7-12.6 for lowest compared to highest quartile, p-trend <0.001). This association remained in participants who developed cancer more than 10 years after blood collection, and after restricting the analysis to participants with clinically normal serum vitamin B12 (>300 pmol/L). In contrast, pepsinogen I, a known serologic marker of gastric atrophy, was not associated with NCGA in this population. As vitamin B12 absorption requires intact gastric mucosa to produce acid and intrinsic factor, our findings suggest vitamin B12 as a possible serologic marker for the atrophic gastritis that precedes NCGA, one more strongly associated with subsequent NCGA than pepsinogen.
既往研究发现一碳代谢营养素与多种癌症风险之间存在关联,但对于上消化道(UGI)癌症却知之甚少。我们在一项针对男性吸烟者的α-生育酚、β-胡萝卜素癌症预防(ATBC)研究中进行了一项巢式病例对照研究,该研究于1985年至1988年在芬兰开展,分析了几种一碳代谢营养素(维生素B12、叶酸、维生素B6、核黄素和同型半胱氨酸)的诊断前血清浓度。我们进行了一项巢式病例对照研究,纳入了ATBC研究中确诊的127例非贲门胃腺癌(NCGA)、41例食管胃交界腺癌和60例食管鳞状细胞癌新发病例。对照与病例在年龄、血清采集日期和随访时间上进行匹配。在基线时(癌症诊断前长达17年)采集的空腹血清样本中测量一碳营养素浓度。使用条件逻辑回归计算比值比和95%置信区间(CI)。基线时较低的诊断前维生素B12浓度与NCGA风险增加5.8倍相关(最低四分位数与最高四分位数相比,95%CI = 2.7 - 12.6,p趋势<0.001)。这种关联在采血后10年以上患癌的参与者中仍然存在,并且在将分析限制于血清维生素B12临床正常(>300 pmol/L)的参与者后也存在。相比之下,胃蛋白酶原I是一种已知的胃萎缩血清学标志物,在该人群中与NCGA无关。由于维生素B12的吸收需要完整的胃黏膜来产生酸和内因子,我们的研究结果表明维生素B12可能是NCGA之前萎缩性胃炎的一种血清学标志物,与随后的NCGA的关联比胃蛋白酶原更强。