Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, School of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America.
School of Public Health, San Diego State University, San Diego, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Oct 9;14(10):e0223638. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223638. eCollection 2019.
The association between sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption and colorectal cancer (CRC) risk remains unclear and published data are limited.
The analytic cohort included 99,798 women, free of cancer at baseline, from the California Teachers Study, a longitudinal cohort comprised of 133,477 female teachers and administrators who were active or recently retired members of the California State Teachers Retirement System in 1995. SSB consumption constituted caloric soft drinks, sweetened bottled waters and teas, and fruit drinks, derived from a self-administered food frequency questionnaire. Consumption was divided into four categories: Rare or never, >rare/never to <1 serving/week, ≥1 serving/week to <1 serving/day, and ≥1 serving/day. CRC endpoints were based on annual linkage with California Cancer Registry, defined as first diagnosis of CRC, and classified following the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program coding system. Multivariable-adjusted Cox proportional hazards models were used to generate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for assessing the association between SSB consumption and incident CRC.
A total of 1,318 incident CRC cases were identified over 20 years of follow-up (54.5% proximal colon and 45.5% distal colorectum). Compared with rare/never consumers, the multivariable-adjusted HRs (95% CI) were 1.14 (0.86, 1.53) for total CRC; 1.11 (0.73, 1.68) for proximal colon; and 1.22 (0.80, 1.86) for distal colorectum cancers among women consuming ≥ 1 serving/day of SSBs.
SSBs were not significantly associated with CRC risk. The biological effects of high SSB consumption make it important to continue to evaluate whether SSBs are associated with CRC. Additionally, future studies should further assess SSBs in large, racial/ethnically diverse cohorts of males and females, and, if feasible, address changes in SSB consumption over time.
含糖饮料(SSB)消费与结直肠癌(CRC)风险之间的关联尚不清楚,且已发表的数据有限。
分析队列包括 99798 名女性,基线时无癌症,来自加利福尼亚教师研究,这是一个由 133477 名女教师和管理人员组成的纵向队列,她们是 1995 年加利福尼亚州教师退休系统的在职或最近退休的成员。SSB 的消费包括含糖软饮料、加糖瓶装水和茶以及果汁饮料,来自自我管理的食物频率问卷。消费分为四组:罕见或从不,>罕见/从不至 <1 份/周,≥1 份/周至 <1 份/天,和≥1 份/天。CRC 终点基于与加利福尼亚癌症登记处的年度链接,定义为 CRC 的首次诊断,并根据监测、流行病学和最终结果计划编码系统进行分类。多变量调整的 Cox 比例风险模型用于生成风险比(HR)和 95%置信区间(CI),以评估 SSB 消费与 CRC 发病之间的关联。
在 20 年的随访中,共发现 1318 例 CRC 病例(54.5%近端结肠和 45.5%远端结直肠)。与罕见/从不消费者相比,多变量调整后的 HR(95%CI)分别为 1.14(0.86,1.53)总 CRC;1.11(0.73,1.68)近端结肠;和 1.22(0.80,1.86)女性中远端结直肠癌。
SSB 与 CRC 风险无显著相关性。高 SSB 消费的生物学效应使得继续评估 SSB 是否与 CRC 相关非常重要。此外,未来的研究应进一步评估男性和女性的大型、种族/族裔多样化队列中的 SSB,如果可行的话,还应评估 SSB 消费随时间的变化。