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Independent associations of dairy and calcium intakes with colorectal cancers in the Adventist Health Study-2 cohort

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2017

Yessenia Tantamango-Bartley
Affiliation:
Adventist Health Study, Loma Linda University, 24951 North Circle Drive, NH 2031, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA
Synnove F Knutsen
Affiliation:
Adventist Health Study, Loma Linda University, 24951 North Circle Drive, NH 2031, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA
Karen Jaceldo-Siegl
Affiliation:
Adventist Health Study, Loma Linda University, 24951 North Circle Drive, NH 2031, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA
Jing Fan
Affiliation:
Adventist Health Study, Loma Linda University, 24951 North Circle Drive, NH 2031, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA
Andrew Mashchak
Affiliation:
Adventist Health Study, Loma Linda University, 24951 North Circle Drive, NH 2031, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA
Gary E Fraser*
Affiliation:
Adventist Health Study, Loma Linda University, 24951 North Circle Drive, NH 2031, Loma Linda, CA 92350, USA
*
* Corresponding author: Email gfraser@llu.edu
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Abstract

Objective

Results associating dairy and Ca intakes with colorectal cancer (CRC) risk have been mixed. Most previous analyses have suffered from confounding between dairy and Ca intakes. We examined independent associations between these variables, also dairy foods, and CRC incidence in a population with a large range of dairy intakes.

Design

Adventist Health Study-2 is a cohort study where subjects were enrolled 2002–2007. Proportional hazard regression analyses were performed to estimate hazard ratios (HR). Regression calibration was used to correct for dietary measurement error.

Setting

The population lived in all states of the USA.

Subjects

There were 77712 analytic subjects, all of whom were Seventh-day Adventists. Much of their dietary Ca came from non-dairy sources.

Subjects

During a mean follow-up of 7·8 years, 380 incident colon cancer and 111 incident rectal cancer cases were observed.

Results

Comparing extreme quintiles of intake in measurement error-corrected analyses, dairy intake (HR=0·31; 95 % CI 0·09, 0·88), independent of total Ca, was inversely related with risk of rectal cancer but gave little indication of association with colon cancer. However, total Ca intake (independent of dairy) was associated with risk of colon cancer (HR=0·55; 95 % CI 0·28, 0·98) and there was little indication of association with rectal cancer. Traditional regression analyses and associations with macronutrients from dairy generally supported these results. Milk intake was also negatively associated with CRC (HR=0·63; 95 % CI 0·43, 0·89).

Conclusions

Dairy intake may decrease the risk of rectal cancer, and Ca may reduce risk of colon cancer and CRC.

Information

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2017 
Figure 0

Table 1 Demographic characteristics by quintile of energy from total dairy intake in participants of the Adventist Health Study-2, USA, 2002–2011

Figure 1

Table 2 Demographic characteristics by quintile of total calcium intake in participants of the Adventist Health Study-2, USA, 2002–2011

Figure 2

Table 3 Mean intakes of dairy and calcium by cancer of the colon and rectum among participants of the Adventist Health Study-2, USA, 2002–2011

Figure 3

Table 4 Multivariate-adjusted (adj.) uncorrected and regression calibration (RC) hazard ratios (HR) describing associations between dairy intake and incident cancers of the colon and rectum among participants of the Adventist Health Study-2, USA, 2002–2011

Figure 4

Table 5 Multivariate*-adjusted hazard ratios (HR) of the associations between dairy foods and incident cancers of the colon and rectum among participants of the Adventist Health Study-2, USA, 2002–2011

Figure 5

Table 6 Multivariate-adjusted (adj.) uncorrected and regression calibration (RC) hazard ratios (HR) describing associations between calcium intake and incident cancers of the colon and rectum among participants of the Adventist Health Study-2, USA, 2002–2011

Supplementary material: File

Tantamango-Bartley supplementary material

Tables S1-S3

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