Department of Social Medicine and Health Management, School of Public Health, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei, People's Republic of China.
Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Br J Nutr. 2019 Sep 14;122(5):488-498. doi: 10.1017/S0007114519001107.
Findings of epidemiological studies regarding the association between carrot consumption and lung cancer risk remain inconsistent. The present study aimed to summarise the current epidemiological evidence concerning carrot intake and lung cancer risk with a meta-analysis. We conducted a meta-analysis of case-control and prospective cohort studies, and searched PubMed and Embase databases from their inception to April 2018 without restriction by language. We also reviewed reference lists from included articles. Prospective cohort or case-control studies reporting OR or relative risk with the corresponding 95 % CI of the risk lung cancer for the highest compared with the lowest category of carrot intake. A total of eighteen eligible studies (seventeen case-control studies and one prospective cohort study) were included, involving 202 969 individuals and 5517 patients with lung cancer. The pooled OR of eighteen studies for lung cancer was 0·58 (95 % CI 0·45, 0·74) by comparing the highest category with the lowest category of carrot consumption. Based on subgroup analyses for the types of lung cancer, we pooled that squamous cell carcinoma (OR 0·52, 95 % CI 0·19, 1·45), small-cell carcinoma (OR 0·43, 95 % CI 0·12, 1·59), adenocarcinoma (OR 0·34, 95 % CI 0·15, 0·79), large-cell carcinoma (OR 0·40, 95 % CI 0·10, 1·57), squamous and small-cell carcinoma (OR 0·85, 95 % CI 0·45, 1·62), adenocarcinoma and large-cell carcinoma (OR 0·20, 95 % CI 0·02, 1·70) and mixed types (OR 0·61, 95 % CI 0·46, 0·81). Exclusion of any single study did not materially alter the pooled OR. Integrated epidemiological evidence from observational studies supported the hypothesis that carrot consumption may decrease the risk of lung cancer, especially for adenocarcinoma.
关于食用胡萝卜与肺癌风险之间关联的流行病学研究结果仍不一致。本研究旨在通过 meta 分析总结目前有关胡萝卜摄入量与肺癌风险的流行病学证据。我们对病例对照和前瞻性队列研究进行了 meta 分析,并从建立至 2018 年 4 月在 PubMed 和 Embase 数据库中进行了无语言限制的检索。我们还查阅了纳入文章的参考文献列表。纳入的研究报告了 OR 或相对风险,最高与最低胡萝卜摄入量类别相比,风险肺癌的相应 95 % CI。共有 18 项符合条件的研究(17 项病例对照研究和 1 项前瞻性队列研究),涉及 202969 名个体和 5517 名肺癌患者。通过比较胡萝卜摄入量最高与最低类别,18 项研究的肺癌汇总 OR 为 0·58(95 % CI 0·45,0·74)。基于肺癌类型的亚组分析,我们汇总了鳞状细胞癌(OR 0·52,95 % CI 0·19,1·45)、小细胞癌(OR 0·43,95 % CI 0·12,1·59)、腺癌(OR 0·34,95 % CI 0·15,0·79)、大细胞癌(OR 0·40,95 % CI 0·10,1·57)、鳞状细胞癌和小细胞癌(OR 0·85,95 % CI 0·45,1·62)、腺癌和大细胞癌(OR 0·20,95 % CI 0·02,1·70)和混合类型(OR 0·61,95 % CI 0·46,0·81)的 OR。排除任何单项研究均未实质性改变汇总 OR。来自观察性研究的综合流行病学证据支持胡萝卜摄入可能降低肺癌风险的假设,尤其是腺癌。