Luo Zhuanbo, Chen Shiyu, Chen Peixu, Xiong Kunlong, Cao Chao
Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease of Ningbo, The First Affiliated Hospital of Ningbo University, Ningbo, Zhejiang, China.
Front Immunol. 2025 Apr 7;16:1556828. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1556828. eCollection 2025.
The development and progression of cancer can be impacted by the nutrients and components contained in the diet. This research seeks to explore the relationship between the antioxidant and pro-inflammatory properties of diet and the risk of all-cause mortality among cancer survivors.
Adults aged 20 and above who had been diagnosed with cancer and participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) from 2001 to 2018 were selected for this study. Their survival status was verified using death certificate information from the National Death Index. The study employed two established measures, the Composite Dietary Antioxidant Index (CDAI) and the Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII), to evaluate the antioxidant and inflammatory properties of participants' diets. A non-linear association between these two dietary indices and mortality was examined respectively using restricted cubic spline (RCS) regression. To quantify the relationship between the indices and mortality risk, multivariable Cox proportional hazards models were employed, generating hazard ratios and corresponding 95% confidence intervals. Furthermore, the study also explored the connection between the CDAI and DII.
In this study, a total of 3,507 cancer survivors, representing an estimated 20,016,255 cancer survivors in the US, were included in the baseline analysis. The results showed that patients with lower DII or higher CDAI values had better survival rates. RCS regression revealed that both indicators showed linear relationships with all-cause mortality in the crude and adjusted models. It was consistently noted higher CDAI or lower DII was related to a reduced risk of all-cause mortality in cancer survivors in the Cox regression. Moreover, the subgroup analysis demonstrated that these associations hold true across various subgroups, lending credibility to the overall findings of the study. At last, an inverse correlation was observed between CDAI and DII in the diets of cancer survivors.
The research suggests that adopting a diet that low in pro-inflammatory foods and high in antioxidants may lower the all-cause mortality in cancer survivors. However, further prospective cohort studies are necessary to confirm these findings.
饮食中所含的营养物质和成分会影响癌症的发生和发展。本研究旨在探讨饮食的抗氧化和促炎特性与癌症幸存者全因死亡率风险之间的关系。
本研究选取了2001年至2018年期间被诊断患有癌症并参加了美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)的20岁及以上成年人。使用来自国家死亡指数的死亡证明信息核实他们的生存状况。该研究采用了两种既定的测量方法,即综合饮食抗氧化指数(CDAI)和饮食炎症指数(DII),来评估参与者饮食的抗氧化和炎症特性。分别使用受限立方样条(RCS)回归检验这两种饮食指数与死亡率之间的非线性关联。为了量化指数与死亡风险之间的关系,采用了多变量Cox比例风险模型,生成风险比和相应的95%置信区间。此外,该研究还探讨了CDAI与DII之间的联系。
在本研究中,共有3507名癌症幸存者纳入基线分析,估计代表美国20016255名癌症幸存者。结果表明,DII较低或CDAI值较高的患者生存率较好。RCS回归显示,在粗模型和调整模型中,这两个指标与全因死亡率均呈线性关系。在Cox回归中,一直注意到较高的CDAI或较低的DII与癌症幸存者全因死亡率风险降低有关。此外,亚组分析表明,这些关联在各个亚组中均成立,这为该研究的总体结果提供了可信度。最后,在癌症幸存者的饮食中观察到CDAI与DII呈负相关。
该研究表明,采用促炎食物含量低、抗氧化剂含量高的饮食可能会降低癌症幸存者的全因死亡率。然而,需要进一步的前瞻性队列研究来证实这些发现。