抗氧化维生素在预防癌症。

I M Lee
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引用次数: 93

摘要

在美国和其他发达国家,癌症是发病率和死亡率的主要原因。在寻找针对这种疾病的预防策略时,研究人员假设抗氧化维生素可能在预防癌症方面发挥作用,因为存在几种似是而非的生物学机制。本文综述了抗氧化维生素(特别是β -胡萝卜素、维生素E和维生素C)在癌症发展中的作用的流行病学证据。观察性研究提供了相当一致的数据,表明大量摄入抗氧化维生素,尤其是β -胡萝卜素和维生素C,与癌症风险呈负相关。然而,随机试验通常不支持这一假设。对于这些不一致的发现,有几种可能的解释。这些包括:1)观察性研究中其他健康饮食和非饮食习惯的混淆;2)水果和蔬菜中多种不同营养素的组合所起的保护作用,而不是大多数试验所测试的单一营养素或两种营养素的组合;3)大多数随机试验随访时间不足;4)研究群体的异质性。关于抗氧化维生素是否在预防癌症中发挥作用的可靠流行病学证据必须来自观察性研究和随机试验,因为这些不同的研究设计各有其独特的优势和局限性。根据现有的证据,提倡富含水果和蔬菜的饮食,而不是食用特定的抗氧化维生素补充剂,以降低患癌症的风险似乎是谨慎的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Antioxidant vitamins in the prevention of cancer.

Cancer is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States and other developed countries. In searching for preventive strategies against this disease, researchers have postulated that antioxidant vitamins may play a role in preventing cancer since several plausible biological mechanisms exist. This article reviews the epidemiological evidence for a role of antioxidant vitamins (in particular, beta-carotene, vitamin E, and vitamin C) in the development of cancer. Observational studies provide fairly consistent data for an inverse association between high intake of antioxidant vitamins, especially beta-carotene and vitamin C, and cancer risk. However, randomized trials generally have not supported the hypothesis. Several explanations for these inconsistent findings are possible. These include: 1) confounding by other healthy dietary and nondietary habits in observational studies; 2) the protective role of a combination of many different nutrients present in fruits and vegetables, rather than the single nutrient or combination of two nutrients that most trials have tested; 3) inadequate duration of follow-up in most randomized trials; and 4) heterogeneity of the populations studied. Reliable epidemiological evidence regarding whether antioxidant vitamins play a role in preventing cancer will have to come from both observational studies and randomized trials since these different study designs each have unique strengths and limitations. Based on the available evidence, it seems prudent to advocate a diet rich in fruits and vegetables, rather than the consumption of specific antioxidant vitamin supplements, in order to decrease the risk of developing cancer.

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