Yunnan Cancer Hospital/The Third Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University/Yunnan Cancer Center, Kunming 650118, People's Republic of China.
Medical Laboratory, The First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University/Institute of Experimental Diagnostics of Yunnan Province/Key Laboratory of Laboratory Medicine of Yunnan Province, Kunming 650032, People's Republic of China.
Public Health Nutr. 2021 Dec;24(18):6427-6435. doi: 10.1017/S1368980021001579. Epub 2021 Apr 12.
The meta-analysis was conducted to test the link between pancreatic cancer (PC) risk and dietary inflammatory index (DII®) score.
Systematic review and meta-analysis.
We searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science and the Cochrane Library up to 22 November 2020 to identify the relevant studies. Studies that reported the risk estimates and the corresponding 95 % CI for the DII category and PC risk were included. The effect sizes were pooled using the random-effects model. Dose-response analysis was conducted where possible.
Two prospective cohort studies of 634 705 participants (3152 incident cases), and four case-control studies of 2737 cases and 4861 controls.
Overall, the pooled risk ratio (RR) indicated that individuals in the highest category compared with the lowest category had an increased PC risk (RR = 1·45; 95 % CI 1·11, 1·90; P = 0·006). Meanwhile, significant heterogeneity was also revealed. The dose-response meta-analysis indicated that a 1-unit increase in the DII score was associated with the PC risk (RR = 1·08; 95 % CI 1·002, 1·166; P = 0·045; I2 = 94·1 %, P < 0·001). Nonlinear result showed an increased risk of moving from fewer to more inflammatory borders with increasing DII score (Pnonlinearity = 0·003; I2 = 76·5 %, P < 0·001). Subgroup analyses found that significant positive association between PC risk and DII score appeared to be in case-control studies (RR = 1·70; 95 % CI 1·16, 2·50; P = 0·007) and studies with ≤ 31 DII components (RR = 1·76; 95 % CI 1·14, 2·72; P = 0·011).
These findings suggested dietary habits with high inflammatory features (high DII score) might increase PC risk.
进行荟萃分析以检验胰腺癌(PC)风险与饮食炎症指数(DII®)评分之间的关联。
系统评价和荟萃分析。
我们检索了 PubMed、Embase、Web of Science 和 Cochrane 图书馆,截至 2020 年 11 月 22 日,以确定相关研究。纳入了报告 DII 类别和 PC 风险的风险估计值及相应 95%CI 的前瞻性队列研究。使用随机效应模型汇总效应量。在可能的情况下进行剂量-反应分析。
两项包含 634705 名参与者(3152 例发病)的前瞻性队列研究,以及四项包含 2737 例病例和 4861 例对照的病例对照研究。
总体而言,汇总风险比(RR)表明,与最低类别相比,最高类别个体的 PC 风险增加(RR=1.45;95%CI 1.111.90;P=0.006)。同时,还存在显著的异质性。剂量-反应荟萃分析表明,DII 评分每增加 1 个单位,与 PC 风险相关(RR=1.08;95%CI 1.0021.166;P=0.045;I2=94.1%,P<0.001)。非线性结果显示,随着 DII 评分的增加,从炎症程度较低的类别向炎症程度较高的类别转变,风险增加(P 非线性=0.003;I2=76.5%,P<0.001)。亚组分析发现,PC 风险与 DII 评分之间的显著正相关似乎存在于病例对照研究(RR=1.70;95%CI 1.162.50;P=0.007)和 DII 成分数≤31 的研究(RR=1.76;95%CI 1.142.72;P=0.011)中。
这些发现表明,饮食习惯具有较高的炎症特征(高 DII 评分)可能会增加 PC 的风险。