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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A cohort of 11,580 residents of a retirement community initially free from cancer were followed from 1981 to 1989. A total of 1,335 incident cancer cases were diagnosed during the period. Relative risks of cancer were calculated for baseline consumption of vegetables, fruits, beta-carotene, dietary
vitamin C
, and vitamin supplements. After adjustment for age and smoking, no evidence of a protective effect was found for any of the dietary variables in men. However, an inverse association was observed between
vitamin C
supplement use and bladder cancer risk. In women, reduced cancer risks of all sites combined and of the colon were noted for combined intake of all vegetables and fruits, fruit intake alone, and dietary
vitamin C
. Supplemental use of vitamins A and C showed a protective effect on colon cancer risk in women. There was some suggestion that beta-carotene intake and supplemental use of vitamin A, C, and E were associated with reduced risk of
lung cancer
in women, but none of these results were statistically significant. These inverse associations observed in women seem to warrant further investigation, although there was inconsistency in results between the sexes.
...
PMID:Intake of vegetables, fruits, beta-carotene, vitamin C and vitamin supplements and cancer incidence among the elderly: a prospective study. 141 5
A case-control study was conducted to examine the influence of dietary factors on the risk of developing
lung cancer
among women who have never smoked cigarettes. This study included 124 cases of histologically confirmed carcinoma of the lung and 263 community-based controls. Dietary data were collected utilizing the reduced version of the National Cancer Institute (Block) food frequency questionnaire. The results of this analysis, adjusted for age, education, and total calories, indicated a strong protective effect associated with total vegetable consumption and intake of carotene. Individuals in the highest quartile of vegetable consumption experienced the greatest decreased risk with an odds ratio (OR) of 0.2, [confidence interval (CI) 0.1-0.5]. The effect of all vegetables combined was greater than that of green and yellow vegetables alone (highest quartile OR 0.4, CI 0.2-0.7). Similarly, the protective effect of total carotene (highest quartile OR 0.3, CI 0.1-0.6) was somewhat greater than that of beta-carotene alone (highest quartile OR 0.4, CI 0.2-0.8). Retinol intake was not associated with a decreased risk of
lung cancer
in our population. There was an inverse association between
lung cancer
risk and
vitamin C
intake, which was not significant, although a statistically significant trend was noted.
...
PMID:Dietary intake and risk of lung cancer in women who never smoked. 143 44
There is accumulating evidence that free radicals may contribute to various diseases such as cancer or cardiovascular disease. Possible health hazards can to some extent be prevented by the body's multilevel defense system against free radicals, which comprises, besides others, antioxidant vitamins. The 12-year mortality follow-up of 2,974 participants of the Basal Study allowed to test the hypothesis that low antioxidant vitamin plasma concentrations (vitamin A, C, E and carotene) were associated with increased death from cancer of various sites and death from atherosclerosis such as ischemic heart disease and stroke, respectively. For the analysis 204 cancer cases, 132 fatalities from ischemic heart disease (IHD) and 31 deaths from cerebral vascular disease were available. Cancer mortality. Overall mortality from cancer was associated with low mean plasma levels of carotene adjusted for cholesterol (p less than 0.01) and of
vitamin C
(p less than 0.01). Bronchus and stomach cancers were associated with a low mean plasma carotene level (p less than 0.01). Subjects with subsequent stomach cancer had also lower mean
vitamin C
and lipid-adjusted vitamin A levels than survivors (p less than 0.05). Calculating the relative risk with exclusion of mortality during the first two years of follow-up, low plasma carotene was associated with an increased risk for bronchus cancer (RR 1.8, p less than 0.05), and the small number of stomach cancer cases (RR 2.95, p less than 0.05) low plasma levels of carotene and vitamin A with all cancer types (RR 2.47, p less than 0.01), and low plasma retinol in older subjects (greater than 60 years) with
lung cancer
(RR 2.17, p less than 0.05). Studies in other cohorts with a poor vitamin E status revealed an increased risk of subsequent cancer at low vitamin E levels as well. It is concluded that low plasma levels of all major essential antioxidants are associated with an increased risk of subsequent cancer mortality. Cardio-vascular mortality. Plasma carotene concentration below quartile 1 was associated with an increased risk for IHD (RR 1.53, p = 0.02). The same was true for low levels of both carotene and
vitamin C
(RR = 1.96, p = 0.022). The risk of cerebrovascular death was elevated in subjects with low carotene in the presence of low
vitamin C
plasma concentration (RR 4.17, p less than 0.01). These data confirm and extend recent findings on an inverse correlation of beta-carotene and
vitamin C
respectively to CVD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Inverse correlation between essential antioxidants in plasma and subsequent risk to develop cancer, ischemic heart disease and stroke respectively: 12-year follow-up of the Prospective Basel Study. 145 Jun
The relation between the intake of retinoids, carotenoids, vitamin E,
vitamin C
, and selenium and the subsequent risk of
lung cancer
was studied among 4,538 initially cancer-free Finnish men aged 20-69 years. During a follow-up of 20 years beginning in 1966-1972, 117
lung cancer
cases were diagnosed. Inverse gradients were observed between the intake of carotenoids, vitamin E, and
vitamin C
and the incidence of
lung cancer
among nonsmokers, for whom the age-adjusted relative risks of
lung cancer
in the lowest tertile of intake compared with that in the highest tertile were 2.5 (p value for trend = 0.04), 3.1 (p = 0.12), and 3.1 (p less than 0.01) for the three intakes, respectively. Adjustment for various potential confounding factors did not materially alter the results, and the associations did not seem to be due to preclinical cancer. In the total cohort, there was an inverse association between intake of margarine and fruits and risk of
lung cancer
. The relative risk of
lung cancer
for the lowest compared with the highest tertile of margarine intake was 4.0 (p less than 0.001), and that for fruits was 1.8 (p = 0.01). These associations persisted after adjustment for the micronutrient intakes and were stronger among nonsmokers. The results suggest that carotenoids, vitamin E, and
vitamin C
may be protective against
lung cancer
among nonsmokers. Food sources rich in these micronutrients may also have other constituents with independent protective effects against
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Dietary antioxidants and the risk of lung cancer. 146 77
Approximately 90 epidemiologic studies have examined the role of
vitamin C
or vitamin-C-rich foods in cancer prevention, and the vast majority have found statistically significant protective effects. Evidence is strong for cancers of the esophagus, oral cavity, stomach, and pancreas. There is also substantial evidence of a protective effect in cancers of the cervix, rectum, and breast. Even in
lung cancer
, for which carotenoids show a consistent protective effect, there is recent evidence of a role for
vitamin C
. Vitamin C is an important antioxidant and free radical scavenger in plasma and acts to regenerate active vitamin E in lipid membranes. Although several different factors in fruits and vegetables probably act jointly, the epidemiologic and biochemical evidence indicate an important role for
vitamin C
.
...
PMID:Epidemiologic evidence regarding vitamin C and cancer. 846 Jun 19
A case-control study was undertaken in Athens to explore the role of passive smoking and diet in the causation of
lung cancer
, by histologic type, in non-smoking women. Among 160 women with
lung cancer
admitted to one of seven major hospitals in Greater Athens between 1987 and 1989, 154 were interviewed in person; of those interviewed, 91 were life-long non-smokers. Among 160 identified controls with fractures or other orthopedic conditions, 145 were interviewed in person; of those interviewed, 120 were life-long non-smokers. Marriage of a non-smoking woman to a smoker was associated with a relative risk for
lung cancer
of 2.1 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1-4.1); number of cigarettes smoked daily by the husband and years of exposure to husband's smoking were positively, but not significantly, related to
lung cancer
risk. There was no evidence of any association with exposure to smoking of other household members, and the association with exposure to passive smoking at work was small and not statistically significant. Dietary data collected through a semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire indicated that high consumption of fruits was inversely related to the risk of
lung cancer
(the relative risk between extreme quartiles was 0.27 (CI 0.10-0.74)). Neither vegetables nor any other food group had an additional protective effect; furthermore, the apparent protective effect of vegetables was not due to carotenoid vitamin A content and was only partly explained in terms of
vitamin C
. The associations of
lung cancer
risk with passive smoking and reduced fruit intake were independent and did not confound each other.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Passive smoking and diet in the etiology of lung cancer among non-smokers. 196 16
Epidemiologic evidence of a protective effect of
vitamin C
for non-hormone-dependent cancers is strong. Of the 46 such studies in which a dietary
vitamin C
index was calculated, 33 found statistically significant protection, with high intake conferring approximately a twofold protective effect compared with low intake. Of 29 additional studies that assessed fruit intake, 21 found significant protection. For cancers of the esophagus, larynx, oral cavity, and pancreas, evidence for a protective effect of
vitamin C
or some component in fruit is strong and consistent. For cancers of the stomach, rectum, breast, and cervix there is also strong evidence. Several recent
lung cancer
studies found significant protective effects of
vitamin C
or of foods that are better sources of
vitamin C
than of beta-carotene. It is likely that ascorbic acid, carotenoids, and other factors in fruits and vegetables act jointly. Increased consumption of fruits and vegetables in general should be encouraged.
...
PMID:Vitamin C and cancer prevention: the epidemiologic evidence. 846 Jun 19
Plasma antioxidant vitamins A, C, and E and carotene were measured in a group of 2,974 men participating in the third examination of the prospective Basel Study in 1971-1973. In 1985, the vital status and mortality of all participants were assessed. A total of 204 men had died from cancer, including 68 with bronchus cancer and 37 with gastrointestinal cancer (20 with stomach cancer and 17 with large bowel cancer excluding cancer of the rectum). Overall mortality from cancer was associated with low mean plasma levels of carotene adjusted for cholesterol (p less than 0.01) and of
vitamin C
(p less than 0.01). Bronchus and stomach cancers were associated with a low mean plasma carotene level (p less than 0.01). Subjects with subsequent stomach cancer also had lower mean
vitamin C
and lipid-adjusted vitamin A levels than did survivors (p less than 0.05). After calculation of the relative risk using the Cox model with exclusion of mortality during the first 2 years of follow-up, low plasma carotene (below quartile 1) was associated with a significantly increased risk for bronchus cancer (relative risk (RR) = 1.8, p less than 0.05), low plasma levels of carotene and vitamin A with all cancers (RR = 2.47, p less than 0.01), and low plasma retinol in older subjects (greater than age 60 years) with
lung cancer
(RR = 2.17, p less than 0.05). Low levels of
vitamin C
increased the risk of stomach cancer (RR = 2.38) and gastrointestinal cancer (RR = 2.46) in older subjects, but only significantly with the inclusion of the first 2 years. The authors conclude that low plasma levels of antioxidant vitamins are associated with an increased risk of subsequent cancer mortality. This effect was stronger in men above age 60 years at blood sampling, and the effect seems to be site-specific.
...
PMID:Plasma antioxidant vitamins and subsequent cancer mortality in the 12-year follow-up of the prospective Basel Study. 157 Aug 25
Antioxidant micronutrients are one of the body's primary defenses against free radicals and reactive oxygen molecules. Carotenoids,
vitamin C
, and vitamin E trap these molecules, and selenium is an essential component of an antioxidant enzyme. There is considerable support from animal studies for a protective effect of antioxidant micronutrients on cancer. However, the role of these micronutrients in cancer prevention in humans is less clear. Diet studies suggest protective effects of fruits and vegetables on risk of cancer at several sites. Inverse associations between dietary carotenoids and serum beta-carotene and
lung cancer
have been observed repeatedly. Vitamin C has also been consistently inversely associated with risk of oral and esophageal cancer in diet studies and with stomach cancer in both diet and plasma studies. It remains unknown, however, whether carotenoids and
vitamin C
or some other component of fruits and vegetables, the primary sources of these micronutrients, prevent cancer in humans. Selenium has been inversely correlated with cancers at numerous sites in ecologic studies, but observational studies do not provide strong support for a protective effect of selenium on cancer at any site. There also is not strong support for a protective effect of vitamin E on cancer in humans. Results of studies on the association of antioxidant micronutrients with cancer at many sites are inconsistent. This could be due to lack of a true protective effect or could be related to methodologic problems in assessing dietary intake in epidemiologic studies.
...
PMID:Antioxidant micronutrients in cancer prevention. 202 68
Several factors are known to promote the development of a
lung cancer
. Smoking, occupation, environment, chronic bronchitis, and scars in the lung are all risk factors. Many studies have stressed the importance of nutrition, in particular vitamins. Vitamin A is necessary for cell differentiation. Retrospective and prospective studies have proven the inverse relation between provitamin A, beta-carotene, and
lung cancer
of the squamous and oat cell types. Studies in which beta-carotene or natural vitamin A are supplied to smokers, controls, and patients after resection for
lung cancer
are in progress. The study of other vitamins such as
vitamin C
and vitamin E has not led to definitive conclusions. The trace element selenium may also exert a beneficial effect.
...
PMID:Vitamins and lung cancer. 211 8
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