TY - JOUR
T1 - Vegetables, fruits, and related nutrients and risk of breast cancer
T2 - A case-control study in Uruguay
AU - Ronco, Alvaro
AU - De Stefani, Eduardo
AU - Boffetta, Paolo
AU - Deneo-Pellegrini, Hugo
AU - Mendilaharsu, Maria
AU - Leborgne, Félix
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by grants from the Comisión Honoraria de Lucha contra el Cáncer (Montevideo, Uruguay) and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (Lyon, France). Address reprint requests to Dr. Eduardo De Stéfani, Director, Registro Nacional de Cáncer, Avda. Brasil 3080 dep. 402, Montevideo, Uruguay.
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - To evaluate whether the protective effect associated with vegetables and fruits in breast cancer could be explained by nutrients and bioactive substances present in these plant foods, we carried out a case-control study in Uruguay including 400 cases and 405 controls. The intake of vegetables, fruits, and related nutrients was estimated with a food frequency questionnaire on 64 food items. This questionnaire allowed the calculation of total energy intake, and nutrients were calorie adjusted by the residuals method. Odds ratios for study variables were estimated by unconditional multiple logistic regression. Total vegetable, total fruit, dietary fiber, vitamin C, vitamin E, lycopene, folate, and total phytosterol intakes were inversely associated with breast cancer risk [4th quartile odds ratio for total vegetable intake = 0.41, 95% confidence interval = 0.26-0.65, p (for trend) = 0.004]. The association with total vegetable intake was not independent of lycopene intake. The results related to vegetable and nutrient intakes are consistent with antioxidant and antiestrogenic effects. This could be mediated, among other nutrients, by dietary fiber and lycopene intake. The role of other unmeasured phytochemicals, correlated with dietary fiber and lycopene intakes, cannot be ruled out.
AB - To evaluate whether the protective effect associated with vegetables and fruits in breast cancer could be explained by nutrients and bioactive substances present in these plant foods, we carried out a case-control study in Uruguay including 400 cases and 405 controls. The intake of vegetables, fruits, and related nutrients was estimated with a food frequency questionnaire on 64 food items. This questionnaire allowed the calculation of total energy intake, and nutrients were calorie adjusted by the residuals method. Odds ratios for study variables were estimated by unconditional multiple logistic regression. Total vegetable, total fruit, dietary fiber, vitamin C, vitamin E, lycopene, folate, and total phytosterol intakes were inversely associated with breast cancer risk [4th quartile odds ratio for total vegetable intake = 0.41, 95% confidence interval = 0.26-0.65, p (for trend) = 0.004]. The association with total vegetable intake was not independent of lycopene intake. The results related to vegetable and nutrient intakes are consistent with antioxidant and antiestrogenic effects. This could be mediated, among other nutrients, by dietary fiber and lycopene intake. The role of other unmeasured phytochemicals, correlated with dietary fiber and lycopene intakes, cannot be ruled out.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0033500354&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1207/S15327914NC352_3
DO - 10.1207/S15327914NC352_3
M3 - Article
C2 - 10693163
AN - SCOPUS:0033500354
SN - 0163-5581
VL - 35
SP - 111
EP - 119
JO - Nutrition and Cancer
JF - Nutrition and Cancer
IS - 2
ER -