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Dietary patterns and risk of colorectal tumors: a cohort of French women of the National Education System (E3N)

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TLDR
Dietary patterns that reflect a Western way of life are associated with a higher risk of colorectal tumors.
Abstract
Little is known about the dietary patterns associated with colorectal tumors along the adenoma-carcinoma sequence. Scores for dietary patterns were obtained by factor analysis in women from the French cohort of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (1993-2000). Their association with colorectal tumors was investigated in 516 adenoma cases (175 high-risk adenomas) and 4,804 polyp-free women and in 172 colorectal cancer cases and 67,312 cancer-free women. The authors identified four dietary patterns: "healthy" (vegetables, fruit, yogurt, sea products, and olive oil); "Western" (potatoes, pizzas and pies, sandwiches, sweets, cakes, cheese, cereal products, processed meat, eggs, and butter); "drinker" (sandwiches, snacks, processed meat, and alcoholic beverages); and "meat eaters" (meat, poultry, and margarine). For quartile 4 versus quartile 1, an increased risk of adenoma was observed with high scores of the Western pattern (multivariate relative risk (RR) = 1.39, 95% confidence interval: 1.00, 1.94; p(trend) = 0.03) and the drinker pattern (RR = 1.42, 95% confidence interval: 1.10, 1.83; p(trend) = 0.01). The meat-eaters pattern was positively associated with colorectal cancer risk (for quartile 4 vs. quartile 1: RR = 1.58, 95% confidence interval: 0.98, 2.53; p(trend) = 0.02). Dietary patterns that reflect a Western way of life are associated with a higher risk of colorectal tumors.

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Citations
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Anthropometric Factors in Adulthood and Risk of Colorectal Adenomas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored associations between anthropometric factors (height, weight, body mass index, waist and hip circumferences, and weight changes) and adenoma risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low Prevalence of Colorectal Cancer in South Asians than White Population in UK: Probable Factors.

TL;DR: It was concluded that South Asians have very low colorectal cancer prevalence in the UK than White population, which may be related to their diet, dietary habit, and lifestyle.
Dissertation

Exploitation de méthodes biostatistiques factorielles pour l'investigation de la relation nutrition-cancer dans la cohorte Européenne sur le Cancer et la Nutrition (EPIC)

Nada Assi
TL;DR: This thesis aims to develop new biostatistical approaches to investigate the nutrition-cancer relation within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and nutrition (EPIC) study, and the applicability of new methodologies in the field of nutritional epidemiology has been examined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary pattern analysis: a new direction in nutritional epidemiology.

TL;DR: The rationale for studying dietary patterns is described, quantitative methods for analysing dietary patterns and their reproducibility and validity are discussed, and the available evidence regarding the relationship between major Dietary patterns and the risk of cardiovascular disease is discussed.
Book

Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention

TL;DR: This is an account of cancer epidemiology has been expanded and contains new material on cancer biology, molecular epidemiology, preventive strategies and specific types and sites of cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiologic evidence of the protective effect of fruit and vegetables on cancer risk

TL;DR: Prospective studies provide weaker evidence than case-control studies of the association of fruit and vegetable consumption with reduced cancer risk, and the association may have been underestimated in prospective studies because of the combined effects of imprecise dietary measurements and limited variability of dietary intakes within each cohort.
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