A vegetable to meat consumption ratio as a relevant factor determining cancer preventive diet. The Mediterranean versus other European countries.

Maria Kapiszewska
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引用次数: 50

Abstract

The observed growth of cancer incidence in certain regions has been usually linked to frequent consumption of 'unhealthy' food. Such food often contains genotoxic substances as heterocyclic aromatic amines (HAAs) and/or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbones (PAHs), occurring during food preparation, which induce DNA damage in cells. These substances are mainly formed during frying or grilling of meat and they can be removed from the body in a two-stage metabolic process of detoxification (phase 1 and phase 2). If they are not excreted, they form DNA adducts. The effectiveness of detoxification depends on the activity of enzymes encoded by polymorphic genes. A diet containing plenty of fruits and vegetables, due to the presence of biologically active polyphenols, can modulate activity of detoxifying enzymes. Such a diet can decrease the extent of DNA adducts, breaks and oxidative damage, supporting the body's enzymatic system in sufficient removal of DNA damage. The antioxidant vitamins' content in such a diet also enhances the DNA protection by increasing the scavenging of radical oxidative species that occurs during metabolic reactions. The lack of balance between the amount of 'unhealthy' and 'healthy' food leads to the accumulation of unrepaired damage, initiating DNA instability and inducing cancer development. Such damage is often used as a biomarker of cancer risk in epidemiological studies. Moreover, in in vitro studies, the amount of the DNA damage is used as indicator of the protective ability of vitamins, plant extracts and/or individual flavonoids. The incidences of certain dietaryrelated cancers in European Mediterranean countries is lower than in Central and Northern European countries; there is simultaneously variation in the habitual diet in these regions. This suggests that some features of routine nutrition in the Mediterranean countries may be responsible for this preventing effect. However, inconsistency in the epidemiological data, associating the meat and fruit and vegetable intake with cancer risk, suggests that another strategy for evaluation dietary influence on cancer risk should be undertaken. This article argues that it is not the consumption of a single food product or an individual component of diet, but rather a proper ratio of vegetable to meat consumption that is responsible for cancer prevention. This hypothesis is tested comparing the association between certain dietaryrelated cancer incidences (colon & rectum, breast and prostate cancer), registered in 2002, with the ratio between consumption of these two groups of food products in the Mediterranean region and in Central and Northern European region over the last three decades. The results clearly showed that both the ratio between vegetables and meat consumption as well as the ratio between the amount of energy from vegetables and from animal products can be used successfully to evaluate the dietary pattern related to cancer risk.

蔬菜与肉类的消费比例是决定癌症预防饮食的相关因素。地中海和其他欧洲国家。
在某些地区观察到的癌症发病率的增长通常与频繁食用“不健康”食品有关。这类食品通常含有遗传毒性物质,如杂环芳香胺(HAAs)和/或多环芳烃(PAHs),这些物质在食品制备过程中产生,会导致细胞DNA损伤。这些物质主要是在煎炸或烧烤肉类的过程中形成的,它们可以通过两个阶段的解毒代谢过程(第一阶段和第二阶段)从体内排出。如果不排出,它们就会形成DNA加合物。解毒的有效性取决于多态基因编码的酶的活性。含有大量水果和蔬菜的饮食,由于生物活性多酚的存在,可以调节解毒酶的活性。这样的饮食可以减少DNA加合物、断裂和氧化损伤的程度,支持身体的酶系统充分去除DNA损伤。这种饮食中抗氧化维生素的含量也通过增加对代谢反应中发生的自由基氧化物种的清除来增强DNA保护。“不健康”和“健康”食物之间缺乏平衡会导致未修复损伤的积累,引发DNA不稳定并诱发癌症的发展。在流行病学研究中,这种损伤常被用作癌症风险的生物标志物。此外,在体外研究中,DNA损伤的程度被用作维生素、植物提取物和/或单个类黄酮保护能力的指标。某些与饮食有关的癌症在欧洲地中海国家的发病率低于中欧和北欧国家;同时,这些地区的习惯饮食也存在差异。这表明,地中海国家日常营养的某些特点可能是这种预防效果的原因。然而,流行病学数据的不一致,将肉类、水果和蔬菜摄入量与癌症风险联系起来,表明应该采取另一种评估饮食对癌症风险影响的策略。这篇文章认为,预防癌症的关键不是食用单一的食品或饮食的单个组成部分,而是蔬菜和肉类的适当比例。通过比较2002年登记的某些与饮食有关的癌症发病率(结肠癌和直肠癌,乳腺癌和前列腺癌)与地中海地区和中欧和北欧地区在过去三十年中这两类食品的消费量之间的关系,对这一假设进行了检验。结果清楚地表明,蔬菜和肉类消费量的比例以及蔬菜和动物产品能量的比例都可以成功地用于评估与癌症风险相关的饮食模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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