Coffee Consumption and the Incidence of Colorectal Cancer in Women.

IF 1.8 Q3 ONCOLOGY
Journal of Cancer Epidemiology Pub Date : 2016-01-01 Epub Date: 2016-04-28 DOI:10.1155/2016/6918431
Erik J Groessl, Matthew A Allison, Joseph C Larson, Samuel B Ho, Linda G Snetslaar, Dorothy S Lane, Katie M Tharp, Marcia L Stefanick
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Background. Higher coffee consumption has been associated with decreased incidence of colorectal cancer. Our objective was to examine the relationship of coffee intake to colorectal cancer incidence in a large observational cohort of postmenopausal US women. Methods. Data were collected for the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study providing a follow-up period of 12.9 years. The mean age of our sample (N = 83,778 women) was 63.5 years. Daily coffee intake was grouped into 3 categories: None, moderate (>0-<4 cups), and high (4+ cups). Proportional hazards modeling was used to evaluate the relationship between coffee intake and colorectal cancer. Results. There were 1,282 (1.53%) new cases of colorectal cancer during follow-up. Compared to nondrinkers, moderate and high coffee drinkers had an increased incidence of colorectal cancer in multivariate analysis (HR 1.15, 1.02-1.29; HR 1.14, 0.93-1.38). Moderate drip brew coffee intake (HR 1.20, 1.05-1.36) and high nondrip brew coffee intake (HR 1.43, 1.01-2.02) were associated with increased odds. Conclusion. Our results suggesting increased incidence of colorectal cancer associated with higher coffee consumption contradict recent meta-analyses but agree with a number of other studies showing that coffee increases risk or has no effect. Brew method results are novel and warrant further research.

Abstract Image

饮用咖啡与女性结直肠癌的发病率
背景。多喝咖啡可以降低结直肠癌的发病率。我们的目的是在美国绝经后妇女的大型观察队列中研究咖啡摄入量与结直肠癌发病率的关系。方法。数据是为妇女健康倡议观察性研究收集的,随访期为12.9年。我们样本(N = 83778名女性)的平均年龄为63.5岁。每日咖啡摄入量分为3类:无,中等(>0-
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Cancer Epidemiology is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, case reports, and clinical studies in all areas of cancer epidemiology.
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