Department of Health and Nutrition Sciences, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, Brooklyn, NY.
Cancer Prevention Program, Division of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2021 Feb;121(2):314-326.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2020.06.014. Epub 2020 Aug 4.
Laboratory and animal studies suggest an inverse association between chocolate consumption and the risk of cancer. Epidemiological studies have yielded inconsistent evidence.
To assess the association of chocolate candy consumption with incident, invasive total, breast, colorectal, and lung cancers in a large cohort of postmenopausal American women.
Prospective cohort study with a mean 14.8-year follow-up. Chocolate candy intake was assessed by food frequency questionnaire. Invasive cancer events were assessed by physician adjudication.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: The Women's Health Initiative Study enrolled 161,808 postmenopausal women at 40 clinical centers nationwide between 1993 and 1998. Of these women, 114,281 with plausible food frequency or biometric data and no missing data on chocolate candy exposure were selected for analysis.
Cancer risk in quartiles of chocolate candy consumption with the first quartile as referent.
Multivariable Cox regression was used to calculate hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals.
There were 16,164 documented incident invasive cancers, representing an incidence rate of 17.0 per 100 participants and 12.3 per 1000 person years during follow-up among participants without any preexisting cancers or missing outcome data. There were no statistically significant associations for total invasive cancer (P-linear = .47, P-curvature = .14), or invasive breast cancer (P-linear = .77, P-curvature = .26). For colorectal cancer P-linear was .02, P-curvature was .03, and compared with women eating a 1 oz (28.4 g) chocolate candy serving <1 time per month, the hazard ratio for ≥1.5 times/wk was 1.18 (95% confidence interval: 1.04-1.35). This result may be attributable to the excess adiposity associated with frequent chocolate candy consumption.
In the Women's Health Initiative, there was no significant association between chocolate candy consumption and invasive total or breast cancer. There was a modest 18% higher risk of invasive colorectal cancer for women who ate chocolate candy at least 1.5 times/wk. These results require confirmation.
实验室和动物研究表明,巧克力的摄入与癌症风险呈负相关。然而,流行病学研究的结果并不一致。
评估大量绝经后美国女性中巧克力糖果的摄入量与新发侵袭性总、乳腺癌、结直肠癌和肺癌的关系。
前瞻性队列研究,平均随访 14.8 年。巧克力糖果的摄入量通过食物频率问卷进行评估。侵袭性癌症事件由医生裁定进行评估。
参与者/设置:妇女健康倡议研究于 1993 年至 1998 年在全国 40 个临床中心招募了 161808 名绝经后妇女。在这些女性中,选择了 114281 名具有合理食物频率或生物统计学数据且没有巧克力暴露缺失数据的女性进行分析。
以第一四分位数为参照,分析巧克力糖果摄入量的四分位数与癌症风险的关系。
采用多变量 Cox 回归计算风险比和 95%置信区间。
共有 16164 例确诊的侵袭性癌症病例,在无任何先前癌症或缺失结局数据的参与者中,发病率为 17.0/100 名参与者,12.3/1000 人年。总侵袭性癌症(P-线性=0.47,P-曲率=0.14)或侵袭性乳腺癌(P-线性=0.77,P-曲率=0.26)之间无统计学显著关联。对于结直肠癌,P-线性为 0.02,P-曲率为 0.03,与每月食用 1 盎司(28.4 克)巧克力糖果<1 次的女性相比,每周食用≥1.5 次的风险比为 1.18(95%置信区间:1.04-1.35)。这一结果可能归因于频繁食用巧克力糖果与肥胖相关。
在妇女健康倡议中,巧克力糖果的摄入与侵袭性总或乳腺癌之间没有显著关联。每周至少食用巧克力糖果 1.5 次的女性患侵袭性结直肠癌的风险增加 18%。这些结果需要进一步证实。