类胡萝卜素与胃癌风险的相关性:荟萃分析
Clin Nutr. 2016 Feb;35(1):109-16.
Association of carotenoids with risk of gastric cancer: A meta-analysis.
Zhou Y, Wang T, Meng Q, Zhai S.
Zibo Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Zibo 255016, Shandong Province, PR China.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Prior studies on carotenoids and gastric cancer risk have generated inconsistent results. We performed a meta-analysis of observational studies to summarize the evidence regarding the relation of carotenoids and gastric cancer risk.
METHODS: A comprehensive search was performed to identify all observational studies providing quantitative estimates between gastric cancer risk and carotenoids. The fixed or random effect model was selected based on the homogeneity test among studies in the highest vs. lowest categorical analyses.
RESULTS: 13 published case-control studies with 14 results including 3919 cases and 7400 controls, and 8 cohort studies involving 1972 cases of gastric cancer and 96,691participants, met the inclusion criteria. For case-control studies, only intake of β-carotene and α-carotene were significantly associated with a reduced gastric cancer risk. The summary OR(95%CI) for β-carotene, α-carotene, lycopene and lutein were 0.52(0.46-0.59), 0.59(0.37-0.92), 0.88(0.55-1.41) and 0.85(0.56-1.30) respectively. In contrast, the summary RR(95%CI) for β-carotene, α-carotene, lycopene and lutein were 0.72(0.50-1.03), 0.79(0.58-1.07), 0.80(0.60-1.07) and 0.95(0.77-1.18), respectively.
CONCLUSION: Although data from case-control studies suggested that β-carotene, α-carotene were inversely associated with risk of gastric cancer, there was no conclusive evidence on this association because of inconsistencies between case-control and cohort studies.
KEYWORDS: Cancer prevention; Diet; Epidemiology; Stomach cancer
PMID: 25726725
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2015.02.003