Zheng Sicong, Yan Jielin, Wang Jiaxin, Wang Xinyi, Kang Yea Eun, Koo Bon Seok, Shan Yujuan, Liu Lihua
Department of Nutrition, Public Health and Management College, Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, Zhejiang 325035, China.
Department of Medical Science, College of Medicine, Chungnam National University, Daejeon 35015, Republic of Korea.
Nutr Rev. 2025 May 1;83(5):842-858. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nuae131.
Epidemiological studies indicated that cruciferous vegetable intake is associated with positive health outcomes. However, the role of cruciferous vegetables may have differential impacts on various cancers.
This meta-analysis aims to review recent epidemiological studies on the link between cruciferous vegetables and various cancers. It seeks to identify the optimal intake dose and timing of cruciferous vegetables influencing their association with cancer risk.
Studies on cruciferous vegetables and cancer were searched in PubMed, NCBI, Web of Science, and Elsevier databases from 1978 to June 2023.
Extracted data from 226 relevant case-control and cohort studies were expressed by standardized mean difference and 95% CI, followed by the subgroup analysis to eliminate heterogeneity.
Intake of cruciferous vegetables can prevent cancers, with an odds ratio of 0.77 and risk ratio (RR) of 0.96. The intake levels of cruciferous vegetables associated with the risk of colorectal cancer, lung cancer, upper gastrointestinal cancer, gynecological cancer (ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer), bladder cancer, renal cancer, and prostate cancer were found to be 5.41 servings/week, 5.41 servings/week, 5.5 servings/week, 7.4 servings/week, 5.5 servings/week, 4.85 servings/week, and 3 servings/week, respectively. In a cohort followed for 2 to 15 years, limited consumption of cruciferous vegetables was correlated with a higher cancer RR. In the Asian population, cruciferous vegetables had a significant relationship with lung cancer, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, and esophageal cancer. Conversely, cruciferous vegetables are predominantly associated with colorectal, renal, gynecological, and prostate cancer in the American population.
This study highlights the complex link between cruciferous vegetables and cancer, influenced by factors such as cancer type, region, intake level, and follow-up duration.
流行病学研究表明,食用十字花科蔬菜对健康有积极影响。然而,十字花科蔬菜的作用可能对各种癌症有不同的影响。
本荟萃分析旨在回顾近期关于十字花科蔬菜与各种癌症之间联系的流行病学研究。它试图确定影响十字花科蔬菜与癌症风险关联的最佳摄入量和摄入时间。
在1978年至2023年6月期间,在PubMed、NCBI、科学网和爱思唯尔数据库中搜索了关于十字花科蔬菜与癌症的研究。
从226项相关病例对照研究和队列研究中提取的数据用标准化均数差和95%置信区间表示,随后进行亚组分析以消除异质性。
食用十字花科蔬菜可预防癌症,优势比为0.77,风险比(RR)为0.96。发现与结直肠癌、肺癌、上消化道癌、妇科癌症(卵巢癌和子宫内膜癌)、膀胱癌、肾癌和前列腺癌风险相关的十字花科蔬菜摄入量分别为每周5.41份、每周5.41份、每周5.5份、每周7.4份、每周5.5份、每周4.85份和每周3份。在随访2至15年的队列中,十字花科蔬菜摄入量有限与较高的癌症RR相关。在亚洲人群中,十字花科蔬菜与肺癌、头颈部鳞状细胞癌和食管癌有显著关系。相反,在美国人群中,十字花科蔬菜主要与结直肠癌、肾癌、妇科癌症和前列腺癌相关。
本研究强调了十字花科蔬菜与癌症之间的复杂联系,这种联系受癌症类型、地区、摄入量和随访时间等因素影响。