Chu Anne Hy, Lin Kehuan, Croker Helen, Kefyalew Sarah, Markozannes Georgios, Tsilidis Konstantinos K, Park Yikyung, Krebs John, Weijenberg Matty P, Baskin Monica L, Copson Ellen, Lewis Sarah J, Seidell Jacob C, Chowdhury Rajiv, Hill Lynette, Chan Doris Sm, Lee Dong Hoon, Giovannucci Edward L
Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2025 May;121(5):986-998. doi: 10.1016/j.ajcnut.2025.01.014. Epub 2025 Jan 11.
Although healthy dietary and lifestyle factors have been individually linked to lower colorectal cancer (CRC) risks, recommendations for whole diet-lifestyle patterns remained unestablished because of limited studies and inconsistent pattern definitions.
This updated review synthesized literature on dietary-lifestyle patterns and CRC risk/mortality.
PubMed and Embase were searched through March 31, 2023 for randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies examining adulthood dietary patterns combined with modifiable lifestyle factors such as adiposity, smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, and/or others. Patterns were categorized by derivation methods: a priori, a posteriori, and a hybrid combining both; and were then descriptively reviewed for the primary outcomes: CRC risk or mortality. The Global Cancer Update Programme Expert Committee and Expert Panel independently graded the evidence on the likelihood of causality using predefined grading criteria.
Thirty-three observational studies were reviewed. "Strong-probable" evidence was concluded for higher levels of alignment with the a priori-derived World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research (WCRF/AICR) recommendations score and lower CRC risk; and "limited-suggestive" evidence for the American Cancer Society guidelines and Healthy Lifestyle Index with lower CRC risk (mainly because of concerns about risk of bias for confounding). A posteriori-derived patterns lack firm evidence (only 1 study). "Strong-probable" evidence was concluded for higher levels of alignment with the Empirical Lifestyle Index for Hyperinsulinemia hybrid pattern and higher CRC risk. By cancer subsite, only the WCRF/AICR recommendations score showed "strong-probable" evidence with lower colon cancer risk. All exposure-mortality pairs were graded "limited-no conclusion." The evidence for other pattern-outcome associations was graded as "limited-no conclusion."
Adopting a healthy pattern of diet, maintaining a healthy weight, staying physically active, and embracing health-conscious habits, such as avoiding tobacco and moderating alcohol, are collectively associated with a lower CRC risk. Healthy lifestyle habits are key to primary CRC prevention. This study was registered at PROSPERO as CRD42022324327 (https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42022324327).
尽管健康的饮食和生活方式因素已分别与较低的结直肠癌(CRC)风险相关联,但由于研究有限且模式定义不一致,关于整体饮食 - 生活方式模式的建议尚未确立。
本更新综述综合了关于饮食 - 生活方式模式与CRC风险/死亡率的文献。
检索了截至2023年3月31日的PubMed和Embase数据库,查找随机对照试验和前瞻性队列研究,这些研究考察了成年期饮食模式与可改变的生活方式因素,如肥胖、吸烟、饮酒、体育活动和/或其他因素。模式按推导方法分类:先验、后验以及两者结合的混合模式;然后对主要结局(CRC风险或死亡率)进行描述性综述。全球癌症更新计划专家委员会和专家小组使用预定义的分级标准独立对因果关系可能性的证据进行分级。
共审查了33项观察性研究。得出“很可能”的证据表明,与先验推导的世界癌症研究基金会/美国癌症研究所(WCRF/AICR)建议评分更高的水平以及更低的CRC风险相关;对于美国癌症协会指南和健康生活方式指数与更低的CRC风险,有“有限 - 提示性”证据(主要是因为担心混杂偏倚风险)。后验推导的模式缺乏确凿证据(仅有1项研究)。得出“很可能”的证据表明,与高胰岛素血症混合模式的经验性生活方式指数更高的水平以及更高的CRC风险相关。按癌症亚部位划分,只有WCRF/AICR建议评分显示出“很可能”的证据表明结肠癌风险更低。所有暴露 - 死亡率对均被分级为“有限 - 无结论”。其他模式 - 结局关联的证据被分级为“有限 - 无结论”。
采用健康的饮食模式、保持健康体重、坚持体育活动以及养成注重健康的习惯,如避免吸烟和适度饮酒,总体上与较低的CRC风险相关。健康的生活方式习惯是结直肠癌一级预防的关键。本研究在PROSPERO注册,注册号为CRD42022324327(https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?ID=CRD42022324327)。