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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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The impact of dietary and lifestyle risk factors on risk of colorectal cancer: A quantitative overview of the epidemiological evidence

TL;DR: Public‐health strategies that promote modest alcohol consumption, smoking cessation, weight loss, increased physical activity and moderate consumption of red and processed meat are likely to have significant benefits at the population level for reducing the incidence of colorectal cancer.
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Nutrients, Foods, and Colorectal Cancer Prevention

TL;DR: Diet modification has the promise of reducing colorectal cancer incidence and emerging evidence also implicates the gut microbiota as an important effector in the relationship between diet and cancer.
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Processed meat and colorectal cancer: a review of epidemiologic and experimental evidence.

TL;DR: In addition, the excess risk in the highest category of processed meat eaters is comprised between 20% and 50% compared with non-eaters in colorectal cancer.
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Possible role of diet in cancer: systematic review and multiple meta-analyses of dietary patterns, lifestyle factors, and cancer risk.

TL;DR: The most convincing evidence supported an association between healthy dietary patterns and decreased risk of colon and breast cancer, especially in postmenopausal, hormone receptor‐negative women, and an associations between unhealthy dietary patternsand increased risk of Colon cancer.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Relative validity and reproducibility of a French dietary history questionnaire

TL;DR: Data indicate that this questionnaire can be used to classify study subjects according to their food or nutrient intake over a one-year period, within a known degree of precision.
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Adenoma--carcinoma sequence or "de novo" carcinogenesis? A study of adenomatous remnants in a population-based series of large bowel cancers.

TL;DR: There are roughly two types of colorectal cancers, one of the infiltrating or ulcero‐infiltrating type, which usually would arise de novo and account for approximately 40% of all coloreCTal cancer cases, and the exophytictype, which would mainly follow an adenoma‐carcinoma sequence, although some might be de noovo cancers, in particular in the right colon.
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Dairy products and colorectal cancer. A review of possible mechanisms and epidemiological evidence

TL;DR: C cohort studies consistently found a protective effect of total dairy products and milk intake, but the evidence is not supported by case–control studies, and no relationship was found with cheese or yoghurt intake.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutritional aspects of the development of cancer

TL;DR: Outlines the main proven dietary links for various forms of cancer – breast, colorectal, lung, prostate, bladder, gastric, cervical and ovarian, endometrial, pancreatic, oesophageal, laryngeal, oral and pharyngeals, testicular and melanoma.
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