| Literature DB >> 28428431 |
Li Li1, Xuesong Gai2.
Abstract
Previous reports have suggested a potential association on dietary zinc intake with the risk of pancreatic cancer. Since the associations between different studies were controversial, we therefore conducted a meta-analysis to reassess the relationship between dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk. A comprehensive search from the databases of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Medline was performed until January 31, 2017. Relative risk (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) derived by using random effect model was used. Sensitivity analysis and publication bias were conducted. Our meta-analysis was based on seven studies involving 1659 cases, including two prospective cohort studies and five case-control studies. The total RR of pancreatic cancer risk for the highest versus the lowest categories of dietary zinc intake was 0.798 (0.621-0.984), with its significant heterogeneity among studies (I2=58.2%, P=0.026). The average Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS) score was 7.29, suggesting a high quality. There was no publication bias in the meta-analysis about dietary zinc intake on the risk of pancreatic cancer. Subgroup analyses showed that dietary zinc intake could reduce the risk of pancreatic cancer in case-control studies and among American populations. In conclusion, we found that highest category of dietary zinc intake can significantly reduce the risk of pancreatic cancer, especially among American populations.Entities:
Keywords: Dietary zinc intake; Meta-analysis; Pancreatic cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28428431 PMCID: PMC5463257 DOI: 10.1042/BSR20170155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Rep ISSN: 0144-8463 Impact factor: 3.840
Figure 1Funnel plot for assessment of publication bias.
Study selection process for this meta-analysis.
Characteristics of the included studies on dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk
| Study (year) | Country | Study design | Cases | Participants | Age (years) | RR (95% CI) for highest versus lowest category | Adjustment for covariates | Score quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baghurst et al. (1991) [ | Australia | Case–control | 104 | 357 | <50–≥80 | 0.90 (0.45–1.82) | Adjust for age; pack-years of smoking, tobacco consumption, and vice versa | 6 |
| Banim et al. (2013) [ | U.K. | Prospective | 49 | 23658 | 40–74 | 0.82 (0.37–1.81) | Adjusted for age, sex, smoking, diabetes, total energy intake, and body mass index category | 8 |
| Bravi et al. (2011) [ | Italian | Case–control | 326 | 978 | 34–80 | 1.39 (0.86–2.24) | Adjusted for age, sex, and center, year of interview, education, tobacco smoking, and history of diabetes, body mass index, and total energy intake | 8 |
| Gong et al. (2010) [ | United States | Case–control | 525 | 2226 | 21–85 | 0.89 (0.66–1.2) | Adjusted for age in 5-year groups, sex, and total energy intake, race, education, body mass index, history of diabetes, smoking, physical activity, and alcohol consumption | 7 |
| Han et al. (2013) [ | United States | Prospective | 162 | 77446 | 50–76 | 0.94 (0.52–1.71) | Adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity, education, body mass index, physical activity, cigarette smoking status, total alcohol consumption, family history of pancreatic cancer, history of diabetes, and total energy intake | 8 |
| Jansen et al. (2013) [ | United States | Case–control | 384 | 1367 | 31–92 | 0.48 (0.32–0.71) | Adjusted for age, sex, cigarette smoking, usual adult body mass index, diabetes mellitus (no, diagnosis <3 years prior or diagnosis 31 years prior), energy intake, number of drinks of alcohol per week, and daily servings of total fruit and vegetable consumption | 7 |
| Lin et al. (2005) [ | Japan | Case–control | 109 | 327 | 40–79 | 0.51 (0.28–0.96) | Adjust for age, pack-years of smoking, and energy intake | 7 |
Figure 2Forest plot for assessment of association between dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk.
Forest plot for assessment of association between dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk.
Figure 3Funnel plot for assessment of publication bias.
Funnel plot for assessment of publication bias.
Figure 4Sensitivity analyses for assessment of association between dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk.
Sensitivity analyses for assessment of association between dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk.
Summary risk estimates of the overall and subgroup analyses on dietary zinc intake and pancreatic cancer risk
| Subgroups | Number of cases | Number of studies | Risk estimate (95% CI) | Heterogeneity test | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All studies | 1659 | 7 | 0.798 (0.621–0.984) | 58.2 | 0.026 |
| Study design | |||||
| Prospective | 211 | 2 | 0.895 (0.556–1.441) | 0.0 | 0.787 |
| Case–control | 1448 | 5 | 0.773 (0.523–0.985) | 71.5 | 0.007 |
| Ethnicity | |||||
| American | 1071 | 3 | 0.729 (0.471–0.987) | 69.8 | 0.037 |
| European | 375 | 2 | 1.179 (0.730–1.904) | 19.7 | 0.264 |
| Mixed | 213 | 2 | 0.661 (0.380–1.151) | 30.0 | 0.232 |