| Literature DB >> 29259973 |
Micah G Donovan1, Ornella I Selmin1,2, Tom C Doetschman2,3, Donato F Romagnolo1,2.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer diagnosis and the second and third leading cause of cancer mortality in men and women, respectively. However, the majority of CRC cases are the result of sporadic tumorigenesis via the adenoma-carcinoma sequence. This process can take up to 20 years, suggesting an important window of opportunity exists for prevention such as switching toward healthier dietary patterns. The Mediterranean diet (MD) is a dietary pattern associated with various health benefits including protection against cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, and various cancers. In this article, we review publications available in the PubMed database within the last 10 years that report on the impact of a MD eating pattern on prevention of CRC. To assist the reader with interpretation of the results and discussion, we first introduce indexes and scoring systems commonly used to experimentally determine adherence to a MD, followed by a brief introduction of the influence of the MD pattern on inflammatory bowel disease, which predisposes to CRC. Finally, we discuss key biological mechanisms through which specific bioactive food components commonly present in the MD are proposed to prevent or delay the development of CRC. We close with a discussion of future research frontiers in CRC prevention with particular reference to the role of epigenetic mechanisms and microbiome related to the MD eating pattern.Entities:
Keywords: carcinogenesis; epigenetics; inflammatory bowel diseases; microbiome; nutrition
Year: 2017 PMID: 29259973 PMCID: PMC5723389 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2017.00059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1The sequence of known genetic mutations that accumulate and manifest as metastatic colorectal cancer, and the potential dietary influences of selected compounds commonly present in the MD pattern. EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; EVOO, extravirgin olive oil; NOC, N-nitroso compounds, MD, Mediterranean diet.
Summary of Mediterranean diet scoring systems applied in reviewed studies.
| System | Index components | Scoring | Differences from MDS |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDS | Alcohol, cereals, dairy, fish, fruits and nuts, legumes, meat and meat products, MUFA:SFA ratio, vegetables | Range: 0–9 | N/A |
| One point for intake | |||
| One point for intake | |||
| One point for alcohol intake of 5–25 g/day for women and 10–50 g/day for men (otherwise 0) | |||
| aMED | Alcohol, fish, fruit, legumes, MUFA:SFA | Range: 0–9 |
Potatoes excluded from vegetable group Fruits and nuts separated into 2 groups Eliminated dairy group Included group for all whole grains Only red and processed meat in meat group Modified range for alcohol intake |
| One point for intake | |||
| One point for intake | |||
| One point for alcohol intake of 5–15 g/day | |||
| IMDI | Alcohol, butter, fish, fruit, legumes, Mediterranean vegetables, olive oil, pasta, potatoes, red meat, soft drinks | Range: 0–11 |
Wider scoring range Points awarded for intake w/in third tertile rather than ≥median Potatoes excluded from vegetables and assigned its own group Included individual groups for butter, olive oil, pasta, and soft drinks Excluded group for cereals and whole grains (pasta included instead) Modified range for alcohol intake |
| One point for intake within third tertile of study distribution of non-bold items | |||
| One point for intake within first tertile for bold items. | |||
| One point for alcohol intake up to 12 g/day, 0 points for >12 g/day and no intake | |||
| MMDS | Alcohol, cereals, dairy, fish, fruits and nuts, legumes, lipid ratio | Range: 0–9 |
Addition of PUFA to numerator of lipid ratio (PUFA + MUFA/SFA = lipid ratio) |
| One point for intake | |||
| One point for intake | |||
| One point for alcohol intake of 5–25 g/day for women and 10–50 g/day for men (otherwise 0) | |||
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Summary of studies investigating anti-inflammatory effects of MD components.
| Study type/dietary component | Model/population | Treatment | Biological outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HT29 and Caco2 cells | 1:1 EPA/DHA (v. untreated control) | ↓ COX-2 | ( | |
| DSS-rats | 2:1 LA/ALA (v. 10:1) | ↓ TNFα, IL-1β, MPO, ALP (colon) | ( | |
| DSS-mice | 2:1 LA/ALA (v. 4:1) | ↓ TNFα, IL-17 (colon) | ( | |
| TNBS-rats | Improved HIS | ( | ||
| ↓ PGE2, LTB4 (colon) | ||||
| IL-10(−/−) mice | DHA supplemented diet (35.5 mg/kg/day) | Improved HIS | ( | |
| ↓ TNFα, IL-17 (colon) | ||||
| ↓ Inflammatory cell infiltration (colon) | ||||
| IL-10(−/−) mice | EPA-enriched diet (3.7% by weight) | ↓ Bacterial-induced inflammation | ( | |
| HLA-B27 rats | High-fiber diet (5% psyllium seed by weight, 13 weeks) | ↓ TNFα, LTB4, NO (colon) | ( | |
| HLA-B27 rats | High-fiber diet (5 g/kg/day, 7 weeks) | ↓ IL-1β (cecal tissue) | ( | |
| ↑ TGFβ (cecal tissue) | ||||
| TNBS-rats | Lactulose-enriched water (2.5% wt/vol, 2 weeks) | ↓ TNFα, LTB4 (colonic mucosa) | ( | |
| DSS-rats | Lactulose (300–1,000 mg/kg twice daily, 6 days) | ↓TNFα, LTB4 (cecal tissue) | ( | |
| DSS-mice | Butyrate-enriched diet (0.5% by weight) | ↓ IL-10 (colon) | ( | |
| ↓ Presence of dendritic cells and memory T lymphocytes in colon | ||||
| ↑ TGFβ (colon) | ||||
| IL-10(−/−) mice | Butyrate supplement (100 mg/kg/day) | Improved HIS | ( | |
| ↓ NF-κB signaling | ||||
| HT29 and Caco2 cells | 200 µM/l EVOO | ↓ COX-2 | ( | |
| DSS-rats | EVOO-enriched diet (5%) | Improved DAI, HIS | ( | |
| ↓ COX-2, iNOS, STAT3 (colonic mucosa) | ||||
| DSS-mice | EVOO-enriched diet (10%) | Improved DAI, HIS | ( | |
| ↓ COX-2, iNOS, TNFα, IL-10 (colon) | ||||
| DSS-mice | EVOO unsaponifiable fraction | Improved DAI, HIS | ( | |
| ↓ COX-2, iNOS, TNFα, MCP1 | ||||
| IL-10(−/−) mice | Olive oil-enriched diet (7% by weight) | ↓ COX-2 (colon) | ( | |
| ↓ Colitis-associated neoplasia | ||||
| PG-PS-rats | Resveratrol (100 mg/kg, postPG-PS injection) | ↓ IL-1β, IL-6, TNFα, and TGFβ (cecal tissue) | ( | |
| DSS-mice | Resveratrol (3 mg/kg BW) | ↓ COX-2, iNOS, TNFα, and IL-1β (colon) | ( | |
| ↑ IL-10 (colon) | ||||
| IL-10(−/−) mice | Resveratrol (100 mg/kg BW) | Improved clinical scores | ( | |
| ↓ TNFα, IL-6, IL-12, IL-1β (colon) | ||||
| TNBS-rats | Resveratrol (10 mg/kg diet) | ↓ PGE2, COX-2, and NF-κB (colon) | ( | |
| Overweight males (BMI > 25) | EPA (58 mg/day) + DHA (32.5 mg/day) (4 weeks) | ↓ IL-1β, IL-6, TNFα | ( | |
| ↑ Adiponectin (circulating) | ||||
| Male and female MS patients (on interferon therapy) | EPA (0.8 g/day) + DHA (1.6 g/day) (1 year) | ↓ TNFα, IL-1β, IL-6, NO metabolites (circulating) | ( | |
| Male and female UC patients (on prednisone) | EPA (3.24 g/day) + DHA (2.16 g/day) (4 months) | Improved HIS | ( | |
| ↓ LTB4 (rectal) | ||||
| ↓ Avg. needed dose of prednisone | ||||
| Male and female UC patients | EPA (3.2 g/day) + DHA (2.4 g/day) (6 months) | ↓ IL-2 (circulating) | ( | |
| ↓ NK cell cytotoxicity | ||||
| Male and female UC patients | 20–30 g Germinated barley fiber supplement | Improved endoscopic index parameters and clinical activity | ( | |
| Spanish coronary heart disease patients | 50 ml/day EVOO (2 × 3 weeks periods) | ↓ IL-6, CRP (circulating) | ( | |
| Young (20–30) and old (65–85) healthy subjects | 25 ml/day EVOO (12 weeks) | ↑ HDL and PON11 anti-inflammatory capacity | ( | |
ALP, alkaline phosphatase; COX-2, cyclooxygenase-2; CRP, C-reactive protein; DAI, disease activity index; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; HIS, histological index scores; IL, interleukin; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; LTB4, leukotriene B4; MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; NK, natural killer; NO, nitric oxide; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; PON1, paraoxonase 1; STAT, signal transducer and activator of transcription; TGF-β, transforming growth factor beta; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor alpha.
Summary of epidemiological studies investigating association between MD adherence and colorectal cancer risk.
| Design | Reference | Cohort/population | Sex | Age | Model | Adjustment | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kontou et al. ( | Athens, Greece | M/W | NR | MMDS | Age, BMI, family Hx, PA, sex, smoking | Decreased risk | OR = 0.88 (0.84–0.92) | |
| Grosso et al. ( | Catania, Italy | M/W | 65.3 | MDS | Age, alcohol intake, diabetes, family Hx, obesity, PA, sex, smoking | Decreased risk | OR = 0.46 (0.28–0.75) | |
| Rosato et al. ( | Various Italian cities | M/W | 19–74 | MDS | Age, BMI, calendar period, center, education, energy intake, family Hx, PA | Decreased risk | OR = 0.52 (0.43–0.62) | |
| Reedy et al. ( | NIH-AARP | M/W | 50–71 | MDS | Age, BMI, education, energy intake, PA, race, smoking, HRT (women only). | Decreased risk (M) | RR = 0.72 (0.63–0.83) | |
| Fung et al. ( | NHS and HPFS | M/W | 30–75 | aMED | Age, alcohol intake, BMI, colonscopy, energy intake, family Hx, multivitamin use, no. of polyps, NSAID use, PA, smoking | No effect | RR = 0.89 (0.77–1.01) | |
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | Age, BMI, education, energy intake, PA, sex, smoking | Decreased risk | HR = 0.50 (0.35–0.71) | |
| Bamia et al. ( | EPIC | M/W | 25–70 | MMDS | Age, BMI, education, PA, sex, smoking | Decreased risk | HR = 0.89 (0.90–0.99) | |
| Vargas et al. ( | WHI | W | 50–79 | aMED | Age, education, PA, race, smoking, HRT | No effect | HR = 0.91 (0.74–1.11) | |
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AARP, American Association EPIC, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; M, men; NHS, Nurses’ Health Study; NIH-AARP, National Institutes of Health Diet and Health Study; NR, not reported; W, women; WHI, Women’s Health Initiative.
Summary of studies investigating association between MD and site-specific cancer.
| Cancer site | Reference | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fung et al. ( | No effect | RR = 0.89 (0.76–1.05) | |
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.87 (0.67–1.13) | ||
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.91 (0.74–1.11) | ||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Decreased risk | HR = 0.54 (0.36–0.81) | |
| Bamia et al. ( | Decreased risk | HR = 0.88 (0.78–1.00) | |
| Grosso et al. ( | Decreased risk | OR = 0.48 (0.26–0.89) | |
| Rosato et al. ( | Decreased risk | OR = 0.49 (0.39–0.60) | |
| Reedy et al. ( | No effect (M) | RR = 0.83 (0.66–1.04) | |
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.84 (0.61–1.84) | ||
| Agnoli et al. ( | No effect | HR = 0.73 (0.33–1.61) | |
| Bamia et al. ( | No effect | HR = 0.92 (0.76–1.11) | |
| Rosato et al. ( | Decreased risk | OR = 0.48 (0.32–0.73) | |
| Reedy et al. ( | Decreased risk (M) | RR = 0.68 (0.53–0.86) | |
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.89 (0.76–1.84) | ||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Decreased risk | HR = 0.44 (0.26–0.75) | |
| Bamia et al. ( | Decreased risk | HR = 0.83 (0.68–1.00) | |
| Rosato et al. ( | Decreased risk | OR = 0.55 (0.41–0.74) | |
| Reedy et al. ( | Decreased risk (M) | RR = 0.69 (0.54–0.88) | |
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.75 (0.50–1.21) | ||
| Fung et al. ( | No effect | RR = 0.78 (0.58–1.05) | |
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.75 (0.46–1.23) | ||
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.80 (0.55–1.15) | ||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Decreased risk | HR = 0.41 (0.20–0.81) | |
| Bamia et al. ( | No effect | HR = 0.90 (0.76–1.07) | |
| Grosso et al. ( | Decreased risk | OR = 0.41 (0.18–0.95) | |
| Rosato et al. ( | Decreased risk | OR = 0.58 (0.44–0.75) | |
Summary of studies investigating association between MD adherence and colorectal cancer-related mortality.
| Reference | Cohort | Sex | Age | Model | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vargas et al. ( | WHI | W | 50–79 | aMED | No effect | HR = 0.90 (0.57–1.43) | 0.66 |
| Jacobs et al. ( | MEC | M/W | 45–75 | aMED | No effect (M) | HR = 1.05 (0.81–1.28) | >0.05 |
| Fung et al. ( | NHS | W | 66.5 | aMED | No effect | HR = 0.87 (0.63–1.21) | 0.31 |
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Summary of meta-analyses investigating the association between MD and colorectal cancer risk.
| Reference | No. of studies (design) | Effect | RR (95% CI, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schwingshackl and Hoffman ( | 2 (case–control) | Decreased risk | RR = 0.85 (0.78–0.94, 45%) | 0.001 |
| 5 (cohort) | Decreased risk | RR = 0.86 (0.76–0.97, 70%) | 0.02 | |
| 7 (total) | Decreased risk | RR = 0.86 (0.80–0.93, 62%) | 0.010 | |
| Schwingshackl and Hoffman ( | 4 (case–control) | Decreased risk | RR = 0.79 (0.67–0.93, 65%) | 0.004 |
| 3 (cohort) | Decreased risk | RR = 0.84 (0.75–0.94, 56%) | 0.002 | |
| 7 (total) | Decreased risk | RR = 0.83 (0.76–0.89, 56%) | <0.00001 | |
| Bloomfield et al. ( | 9 | Decreased risk | RR = 0.91 (0.84–0.98) | Not reported |
Summary of studies investigating association between fruit and vegetable intake and CRC risk.
| Reference | Cohort/population | Sex | Age | Model | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Centonze et al. ( | Southern Italy | M/W | 34–90 | 70-item FFQ | ||
| No effect | RR = 0.51 (0.25–1.04) | |||||
| No effect | RR = 1.02 (0.53–1.95) | |||||
| Reedy et al. ( | NIH-AARP | M/W | 50–71 | MDS | ||
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.94 (0.86–1.03) | |||||
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.98 (0.5–1.12) | |||||
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.94 (0.86–1.03) | |||||
| No effect (W) | RR = 1.04 (0.90–1.19) | |||||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.89 (0.69–1.14) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 0.87 (0.68–1.12) | |||||
| Bamia et al. ( | EPIC | M/W | 25–70 | MMDS | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.98 (0.89–1.08) | |||||
| No effect (M) | HR = 0.91 (0.80–1.06) | |||||
| No effect (W) | HR = 1.02 (0.90–1.16) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 1.03 (0.97–1.08) | |||||
| No effect (M) | HR = 1.02 (0.90–1.17) | |||||
| No effect (W) | HR = 1.01 (0.91–1.12) | |||||
| Rosato et al. ( | Various Italian cities | M/W | 19–74 | MDS | ||
| Decreased risk | OR = 0.69 (0.63–0.75) | |||||
| OR = 0.79 (0.73–0.87) | ||||||
| Decreased risk | ||||||
Summary of studies investigating association between cereals, grains, and legume consumption and CRC risk.
| Reference | Cohort/population | Sex | Age | Model | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Centonze et al. ( | Southern Italy | M/W | 34–90 | 70-item FFQ | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.90 (0.45–1.80) | |||||
| Reedy et al. ( | NIH-AARP | M/W | 50–71 | MDS | ||
| Decreased risk (M) | RR = 0.85 (0.78–0.93) | |||||
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.95 (0.83–1.08) | |||||
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.96 (0.88–1.05) | |||||
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.94 (0.83–1.08) | |||||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.89 (0.70–1.15) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 0.86 (0.69–1.09) | |||||
| Bamia et al. ( | EPIC | M/W | 25–70 | MMDS | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.96 (0.89–1.04) | |||||
| No effect (M) | HR = 0.96 (0.85–1.08) | |||||
| No effect (W) | HR = 0.92 (0.83–1.03) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 1.05 (0.95–1.17) | |||||
| No effect (M) | HR = 0.96 (0.81–1.13) | |||||
| Increased risk (W) | HR = 1.17 (1.01–1.34) | |||||
| Rosato et al. ( | Various Italian cities | M/W | 19–74 | MDS | OR = 0.69 (0.64–0.76) | |
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Summary of studies investigating association between consumption of animal sources of protein and CRC risk.
| Reference | Cohort/population | Sex | Age | Model | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Centonze et al. ( | Southern Italy | M/W | 34–90 | 70-item FFQ | ||
| No effect (fresh meat) | RR = 0.74 (0.37–1.45) | |||||
| No effect (beef) | RR = 0.95 (0.50–1.80) | |||||
| No effect (processed) | RR = 1.01 (0.57–1.69) | |||||
| No effect | RR = 1.07 (0.56–2.05) | |||||
| Reedy et al. ( | NIH-AARP | M/W | 50–71 | MDS | ||
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.94 (0.86–1.03) | |||||
| Increased risk | RR = 0.84 (0.74–0.96) | |||||
| No effect (M) | RR = 0.97 (0.89–1.06) | |||||
| No effect (W) | RR = 1.00 (0.88–1.14) | |||||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.94 (0.72–1.23) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 0.88 (0.68–1.13) | |||||
| Bamia et al. ( | EPIC | M/W | 25–70 | MMDS | ||
| No effect | HR = 1.08 (0.99–1.18) | |||||
| No effect (M) | HR = 1.07 (0.94–1.22) | |||||
| No effect (W) | HR = 1.08 (0.97–1.20) | |||||
| Decreased risk | HR = 0.90 (0.82–0.99) | |||||
| Decreased risk (M) | HR = 0.85 (0.74–0.97) | |||||
| No effect (W) | HR = 0.94 (0.83–1.06) | |||||
| Rosato et al. ( | Various Italian cities | M/W | 19––74 | MDS | ||
| Increased risk | OR = 0.86 (0.79–0.94) | |||||
| OR = 0.78 (0.71–0.85) | ||||||
| Decreased risk | ||||||
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Summary of studies investigating association between consumption of butter, olive oil, dairy, potatoes, sugar, and alcohol and CRC risk.
| Reference | Cohort/population | Sex | Age | Model | Effect | HR/OR/RR (95%CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braga et al. ( | Various Italian locations | M/W | 23–74 | 78-item FFQ | ||
| No effect | HR = 0.88 (0.68–1.14) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 1.00 (0.79–1.26) | |||||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | ||
| Decreased risk | OR = 0.83 (0.70–0.99) | |||||
| No effect | OR = 0.93 (0.80–1.07) | |||||
| Centonze et al. ( | Southern Italy | M/W | 34–90 | 70-item FFQ | Decreased risk | RR = 0.46 (0.22–0.98) |
| Bamia et al. ( | EPIC | M/W | 25–70 | MMDS | Decreased risk | HR = 0.85 (0.78–0.92) |
| Decreased risk (M) | HR = 0.88 (0.78–1.00) | |||||
| Decreased risk (W) | HR = 0.84 (0.75–0.93) | |||||
| Rosato et al. ( | Various Italian cities | M/W | 19–74 | MDS | Decreased risk | OR = 1.09 (1.00–1.19) |
| Centonze et al. ( | Southern Italy | M/W | 34–90 | 70-item FFQ | ||
| No effect | HR = 1.12 (0.86–1.44) | |||||
| Increased risk | RR = 2.75 (1.26–5.97) | |||||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | ||
| No effect | RR = 0.80 (0.41–1.56) | |||||
| No effect | HR = 0.98 (0.78–1.22) | |||||
| Reedy et al. ( | NIH-AARP | M/W | 50–71 | MDS | No effect (M) | RR = 0.91 (0.82–1.00) |
| No effect (W) | RR = 0.93 (0.78–1.02) | |||||
| Agnoli et al. ( | Italian EPIC cohort | M/W | 25–70 | IMDI | No effect | HR = 1.23 (0.96–1.58) |
| Bamia et al. ( | EPIC | M/W | 25–70 | MMDS | No effect | HR = 1.05 (0.96–1.14) |
| Increased risk (M) | HR = 1.20 (1.06–1.35) | |||||
| No effect (W) | HR = 0.98 (0.88–1.08) | |||||
| Rosato et al. ( | Various Italian cities | M/W | 19–74 | MDS | No effect | OR = 1.06 (0.96–1.18) |