Literature DB >> 6831463

Role of diet in cancer incidence in Hawaii.

L N Kolonel, A M Nomura, M W Hinds, T Hirohata, J H Hankin, J Lee.   

Abstract

Incidence rates for many sites of cancer show wide variations among the main ethnic groups in Hawaii (Caucasians, Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, and Hawaiians). Major shifts in cancer rates among migrants to the islands suggest that environmental factors are at least in part responsible for these variations. One prominent area of difference among these ethnic populations is their diets, which can vary substantially, not only in the consumption of particular food items but also in mean nutrient intakes. In aggregate correlational analyses based on data from representative samples of these ethnic groups and corresponding population-based cancer incidence rates, we found significant associations between ethnic-sex-specific intakes of dietary fat (including total fat, as well as animal, saturated, and unsaturated fats) and breast, endometrial, and prostate cancers. Animal protein intake showed associations similar to those for dietary fat, but these two nutrients were highly correlated in the data. Cholesterol intake showed significant correlations with lung and laryngeal cancers. Analyses of both nutrient and food item data suggested an association of stomach cancer incidence with the consumption of fish products, particularly dried/salted fish, and with a lower intake of vitamin C. Preliminary findings from ongoing case-control studies showed the following relationships: an inverse association between lung cancer risk and the intake of food sources of vitamin A, especially foods containing carotenes; an inverse association between cancers of the lower urinary tract and vitamin A consumption, especially from supplements; a positive association between prostate cancer risk and dietary fat intake in men above age 69, but not in younger men; and a positive association between breast cancer risk and the intake of dietary fat (particularly saturated fat) and animal protein in postmenopausal women, especially the Japanese. Two large cohorts (50,000 and 5,000 subjects) on whom dietary information was collected between 1975 and 1980 are being followed prospectively for their occurrence of cancer.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6831463

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  10 in total

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2.  The potential for prostate cancer chemoprevention.

Authors:  Otis W Brawley
Journal:  Rev Urol       Date:  2002

3.  Dietary lipids and endometrial cancer: the current epidemiologic evidence.

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4.  The relationship between animal fat intake, cigarette smoking, and lung cancer.

Authors:  J X Xie; E Lesaffre; H Kesteloot
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5.  Risk factors for breast cancer in the breast cancer risk model study of Guam and Saipan.

Authors:  Rachael T Leon Guerrero; Rachel Novotny; Lynne R Wilkens; Marie Chong; Kami K White; Yurii B Shvetsov; Arielle Buyum; Grazyna Badowski; Michelle Blas-Laguaña
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6.  Phospholipids and fatty acids in breast cancer tissue.

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8.  Fat intake and cancer of the gastrointestinal tract and prostate.

Authors:  R MacLennan
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9.  Exploration of Serum Prostatic Specific Antigen Level in Enlarged Prostate with its Histopathological Correlation.

Authors:  Malvashree Sharma; Anshu Jamaiyar
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Review 10.  A review of nutrition and dietary interventions in oncology.

Authors:  Ashley Gray; Brian N Dang; Theodore B Moore; Roger Clemens; Peter Pressman
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  10 in total

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