Associations of circulating and dietary vitamin D with prostate cancer risk: a systematic review and dose–response meta-analysis
Autor: | William D. Fraser, Luisa Zuccolo, Richard M. Martin, Geertruida E Bekkering, Jonathan A C Sterne, Chris Metcalfe, Rebecca Gilbert, Jelena Savović, R Beynon, RJ Harris |
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Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
Male
Risk Oncology Cancer Research medicine.medical_specialty Prostate cancer Internal medicine Epidemiology Odds Ratio medicine Vitamin D and neurology Humans Prospective Studies Vitamin D Prospective cohort study business.industry Case-control study Prostatic Neoplasms Vitamins Odds ratio medicine.disease Confidence interval Diet Case-Control Studies Meta-analysis business |
Zdroj: | Cancer Causes & Control. 22:319-340 |
ISSN: | 1573-7225 0957-5243 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10552-010-9706-3 |
Popis: | We systematically reviewed and meta-analyzed literature examining associations of vitamin D (dietary intake, circulating 25-hydroxy-vitamin-D (25(OH)D), and 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin-D (1,25(OH)2D) concentrations) with prostate cancer. We searched over 24,000 papers from seven electronic databases (to October 2010) for exposures related to vitamin D. We conducted dose–response random-effects meta-analyses pooling the log odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) per change in natural units of each exposure. The I2 statistic quantified between-study variation due to heterogeneity. Twenty-five papers were included. In prospective studies, the OR per 1,000 IU increase in dietary intake was 1.14 (6 studies; CI: 0.99, 1.31; I 2 = 0%) for total prostate cancer and 0.93 (3 studies; 0.63, 1.39; I 2 = 25%) for aggressive prostate cancer. Five case–control studies examined dietary intake, but there was a high degree of inconsistency between studies (I 2 = 49%). The OR per 10 ng/mL increase in 25(OH)D was 1.04 (14 studies; 0.99, 1.10; I 2 = 0%) for total prostate cancer and 0.98 (6 studies; 0.84, 1.15; I 2 = 32%) for aggressive prostate cancer. The OR per 10 pg/mL increase in 1,25(OH)2D was 1.00 (7 studies; 0.87, 1.14; I 2 = 41%) for total prostate cancer and 0.86 (2 studies; 0.72, 1.02; I 2 = 0%) for aggressive prostate cancer. Published literature provides little evidence to support a major role of vitamin D in preventing prostate cancer or its progression. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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