Dietary Cryptoxanthin & Reduced Risk Lung Ca

Dietary Cryptoxanthin and Reduced Risk of Lung Cancer The Singapore Chinese Health Study1

Jian-Min Yuan2, Daniel O. Stram, Kazuko Arakawa, Hin-Peng Lee and Mimi C. Yu

Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90033 [J-M. Y., D. O. S., K. A., M. C. Y.], and Department of Community, Occupational, and Family Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore 119074 [H-P. L.]

High prediagnostic serum ß-cryptoxanthin levels have been found to be associated with reduced risk of lung cancer in a recent cohort study of Chinese men in Shanghai, China.

Data on dietary ß-cryptoxanthin, and other specific carotenoids and antioxidants in relation to lung cancer, particularly in non-Western populations, are scarce.

The aim of the present study was to assess the roles of dietary antioxidants in the development of lung cancer. Between April 1993 and December 1998, 63,257 Chinese men and women ages 45–74 years in Singapore participated in a prospective study of diet and cancer.

At baseline, an in-person interview was conducted using a structured questionnaire for information on usual dietary habits, tobacco smoking, and other lifestyle factors.

A Singapore food composition database was used to estimate intake of -carotene, ß-carotene, ß-cryptoxanthin, lycopene, lutein/zeaxanthin, vitamins A, C, and E, and folate in study subjects.

During the first 8 years of follow-up, 482 lung cancer cases occurred among cohort members. High levels of dietary ß-cryptoxanthin were associated with reduced risk of lung cancer; relative to the lowest quintile, the self-reported smoking adjusted relative risks (95% confidence intervals) for the highest quintile were 0.73 (0.54–0.98) among all of the subjects and 0.63 (0.41–0.99) among current smokers. Before adjustment for cigarette smoking, dietary vitamin C was associated with a statistically significant reduction in risk of lung cancer.

However the inverse vitamin C-lung cancer association was largely explained by smoking and dietary ß-cryptoxanthin.

Other carotenoids (-carotene, ß-carotene, lycopene, and lutein/zeaxanthin), vitamins A and E, and folate were not associated significantly with lung cancer risk after adjustment for cigarette smoking.

We recognized that potential measurement errors in cigarette smoking may exert an effect on the dietary ß-cryptoxanthin-lung cancer association.

After additional adjustments were made for the residual confounding by smoking using statistical models, about 15–40% reduction in risk of lung cancer was seen for subjects in the highest versus lowest 10th percentile of dietary ß-cryptoxanthin.

The present study lends additional credence to prior experimental and epidemiological data in support of the hypothesis that dietary ß-cryptoxanthin is a chemopreventive agent for lung cancer in humans.

Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Vol. 12, 890-898, September 2003

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