Adherence to the Western, Prudent and Mediterranean dietary patterns and breast cancer risk: MCC-Spain study
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Castelló, Adela; Boldo, Elena; Pérez Gómez, Beatriz; Lope, Virginia; Altzibar, Jone M.; Martín, Vicente; Castaño Vinyals, Gemma; Guevara, Marcela; Dierssen Sotos, Trinidad

Fecha
2017-06-12Derechos
© <2017> Elsevier. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license
Publicado en
Maturitas
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.maturitas.2017.06.020
Editorial
Elsevier Science Publishers
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Mediterranean diet
Western diet
Breast neoplasms
Prevention and control
Population attributable fraction
Resumen/Abstract
Objective
To externally validate the previously identified effect on breast cancer risk of the Western, Prudent and Mediterranean dietary patterns.
Study design
MCC-Spain is a multicase-control study that collected epidemiological information on 1181 incident cases of female breast cancer and 1682 control cases from 10 Spanish provinces. Three dietary patterns derived in another Spanish case-control study were analysed in the MCC-Spain study. These patterns were termed Western (high intakes of fatty and sugary products and red and processed meat), Prudent (high intakes of low-fat dairy products, vegetables, fruits, whole grains and juices) and Mediterranean (high intake of fish, vegetables, legumes, boiled potatoes, fruits, olives, and vegetable oil, and a low intake of juices). Their association with breast cancer was assessed using logistic regression models with random province-specific intercepts considering an interaction with menopausal status. Risk according to tumour subtypes ? based on oestrogen (ER), progesterone (PR) and human epidermal growth factor 2 (HER2) receptors (ER+/PR+&HER2-; HER2+; ER-/PR-&HER2-) ? was evaluated with multinomial regression models.
Main outcome measures
Breast cancer and histological subtype.
Results
Our results confirm most of the associations found in the previous case-control study. A high adherence to the Western dietary pattern seems to increase breast cancer risk in both premenopausal women (OR4thvs.1stquartile(95%CI):1.68(1.02;2.79); OR1SD-increase(95%CI): 1.19(1.01;1.40)) and postmenopausal women (OR4thvs.1stquartile(95%CI):1.48(1.07;2.05); OR1SD-increase(95%CI): 1.14(1.01;1.28)). While high adherence to the Prudent pattern did not show any effect on breast cancer, the Mediterranean dietary pattern seemed to be protective, but only among postmenopausal women (OR4thvs.1stquartile (95%CI):0.72(95% CI 0.53;0.98); p-int = 0.075). There were no significant differences by tumour subtype.
Conclusion
Dietary recommendations based on a departure from the Western dietary pattern in favour of the Mediterranean diet could reduce breast cancer risk in the general population.
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