| Literature DB >> 28884114 |
Cristiano Capurso1, Gianluigi Vendemiale1.
Abstract
Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in the world among men, and is the fifth most common cause of cancer death among men. The aim of our review was to analyze observational and case-control studies to point out the effects of overweight and diets components on the cancer risk, particularly on risk of prostate cancer, and the effect of the Mediterranean diet (MD) on the reduction of risk and mortality of prostate cancer. It is known that incidence and progression of cancer is multifactorial. Cancer of the large bowel, breast, endometrium, and prostate are due also to a high body mass index and to high consumption of high carcinogenic dietary factors, as red and processed meat or saturated fats rich foods, and to a low consumption of vegetables and fruits. Previous meta-analysis suggested that high adherence to diet model based on the traditional MD pattern gives a significant protection from incidence and mortality of cancer of all types. The main component of the MD is olive oil, consumed in high amount by Mediterranean basin populations. In addition, phenolic compounds exert some strong chemo-preventive effects, which are due to several mechanisms, including both antioxidant effects and actions on cancer cell signaling and cell cycle progression and proliferation. The protective effect of the MD against the prostate cancer is also due to the high consumption of tomato sauce. Lycopene is the most relevant functional component in tomatoes; after activating by the cooking of tomato sauce, it exerts antioxidant properties by acting in the modulation of downregulation mechanisms of the inflammatory response. MD, therefore, represents a healthy dietary pattern in the context of a healthy lifestyle habits. In conclusion, our narrative review allows us to reaffirm how nutritional factors play an important role in cancer initiation and development, and how a healthy dietary pattern represented by MD and its components, especially olive oil, could exert a protective role by the development and progression of prostate cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; nutrition; obesity; olive oil; prostate cancer
Year: 2017 PMID: 28884114 PMCID: PMC5573712 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2017.00038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Red meat, processed meat and unprocessed meat intake, and development of cancer.
| Reference | Characteristics of the studies | Sample size | Risk of prostate cancer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kolonel ( | Review from 14 case–control and 8 cohort studies | 5,121 cases and 6,956 controls from case–control studies; 1,007 cases among 276,148 men from cohort studies | |
| Nowell et al. ( | Population-based case–control study | 464 cases, 459 controls | |
| Tavani et al. ( | Review from case–control studies | 127 cases, 3,220 male controls | |
| Bosetti et al. ( | Case–control study | 1,294 cases, 1,451 controls | |
| Cross et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 29,361 men | |
| Sinha et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 10,313 prostate cancer cases from a cohort of 175,343 men | |
| Wu et al. ( | Pooled analysis of 15 cohorts from prospective studies of diet and cancer | 52,683 prostate cancer cases from 842,149 subjects of 15 cohorts | RR = 1.02 (95% CI: 0.98–1.06, |
| Gilsing et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 399 prostate cancer cases from a cohort of 120,852 subjects | |
Fatty acids intake and development of prostate cancer.
| Reference | Characteristics of the studies | Sample size | Risk of prostate cancer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Giovannucci et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 126 cases from a cohort of 47,855 subjects | |
| Gann et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 120 prostate cancer cases and 120 controls from a cohort of 14,916 subjects | |
| Simon et al. ( | Meta-analysis from 13 retrospective case–control studies and 3 prospective cohort studies | 5,701 prostate cancer cases and 7,449 controls from case–control studies | |
| Szymanski et al. ( | Meta-analysis from 12 case–control studies and from 12 cohort studies | 5,777 cases of prostate cancer cases and 9,805 controls from case–control studies | |
| Kurahashi et al. ( | Population-based prospective study | 329 cases from a cohort of 43,435 men | |
Dairy products, calcium intake, and Vitamin D and development of prostate cancer.
| Reference | Characteristics of the studies | Sample size | Risk of prostate cancer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kurahashi et al. ( | Population-based prospective study | 329 cases from a cohort of 43,435 men | |
| Song et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | Survival analysis among 2,806 incident prostate cancer cases, from a cohort of 21,660 men | |
| Park et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 17,189 cases in a total cohort of 293,907 men and 198,903 women | |
| Huncharek et al. ( | Meta-analysis from 45 observational studies | 26,769 cases from 21 cohort studies and from 24 case–control studies | |
| Aune et al. ( | Meta-analysis from 32 prospective studies within the continuous update project | 63,308 prostate cancer cases among 2,338,285 subjects | |
| Rodriguez et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 3,811 cases from a cohort of 65,321 men | |
| Xu et al. ( | Meta-analysis from case–control studies and prospective cohort studies | 11,941 cases and 13,870 controls | |
Figure 1Mediterranean diet pyramid.
Figure 2Lycopene.
Mediterranean diet (MD) components and development of prostate cancer.
| Reference | Characteristics of the studies | Sample size | Risk of prostate cancer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bosetti et al. ( | Case–control study | 1,294 cases and 1,451 controls | Odds ratio (OR) = 1.15 (95% CI = 0.90–1.46, |
| Turati et al. ( | Meta-analysis from case–control studies | 1.294 prostate cancer cases from 10,796 cases of different cancers and 17,000 controls | OR = 0.87 (95% CI = 0.70–1.09) for highest intake of cruciferous vegetables |
| Schwingshackl and Hoffmann ( | Meta-analysis from 21 cohort studies and 12 case–control studies | 29,867 prostate cancer cases from a total number of 1,431,461 subjects | RR: 0.96 (95% CI = 0.92–0.99, |
| Psaltopoulou et al. ( | Systematic review and meta-analysis from 19 observational studies | 13,800 patients and 23,340 controls from overall studies; 1,495 prostate cancer cases and 1,631 controls from three case–control studies | OR: 0.53 (95% CI = 0.30–0.94, |
| Key et al. ( | Meta-analysis from 15 case–control studies | 11,239 prostate cancer cases and 18,541 controls | |
| Gann et al. ( | Case–control study | 578 prostate cancer cases and 1,294 controls | |