Association of plasma retinol levels with incident cancer risk in Chinese hypertensive adults: a nested case–control study

We aimed to investigate the association between plasma retinol and incident cancer among Chinese hypertensive adults. We conducted a nested case–control study, including 231 patients with incident cancer and 231 matched controls during a median 4·5-year follow-up of the China Stroke Primary Preventi...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of nutrition 2019-08, Vol.122 (3), p.293-300
Hauptverfasser: Xie, Liling, Song, Yun, Lin, Tengfei, Guo, Huiyuan, Wang, Binyan, Tang, Genfu, Liu, Chengzhang, Huang, Weitong, Yang, Yan, Ling, Wenhua, Zhang, Yan, Li, Jianping, Huo, Yong, Wang, Xiaobin, Zhang, Hao, Qin, Xianhui, Xu, Xiping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We aimed to investigate the association between plasma retinol and incident cancer among Chinese hypertensive adults. We conducted a nested case–control study, including 231 patients with incident cancer and 231 matched controls during a median 4·5-year follow-up of the China Stroke Primary Prevention Trial. There was a significant, inverse association between retinol levels and digestive system cancer (per 10 μg/dl increases: OR 0·79; 95 % CI 0·69, 0·91). When compared with participants in the first quartile of retinol (< 52·3 μg/dl), a significantly lower cancer risk was found in participants in quartile 2–4 ( ≥ 52·3 μg/dl: OR 0·31; 95 % CI 0·13, 0·71). However, there was a U-shaped association between retinol levels and non-digestive system cancers where the risk of cancers decreased (although not significantly) with each increment of plasma retinol (per 10 μg/dl increases: OR 0·89; 95 % CI 0·60, 1·31) in participants with retinol < 68·2 μg/dl, and then increased significantly with retinol (per 10 μg/dl increase: OR 1·65; 95 % CI 1·12, 2·44) in participants with retinol ≥ 68·2 μg/dl. In conclusion, there was a significant inverse dose–response association between plasma retinol and the risk of digestive system cancers. However, a U-shaped association was observed between plasma retinol and the risk of non-digestive cancers (with a turning point approximately 68·2 μg/dl).
ISSN:0007-1145
1475-2662
DOI:10.1017/S000711451900120X