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Average intake of anti-oxidant (PRO)vitamins and subsequent cancer mortality in the 16 cohorts of the seven countries study

✍ Scribed by Marga C. Ocké; Daan Kromhout; Alessandro Menotti; Christ Aravanis; Henry Blackburn; Ratko Buzina; Flaminio Fidanza; Annemarie Jansen; Srecko Nedeukovic; Aulikki Nissinen; Maija Pekkarinen; Hironori Toshima


Book ID
102870072
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1995
Tongue
French
Weight
612 KB
Volume
61
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

This ecologic study aimed to investigate whether differences in population mortality from lung, stomach and colorectal cancer among the 16 cohorts of the Seven Countries Study could be explained by differences in the average intake of anti‐oxidant (pro)vitamins. In the 1960s, detailed dietary information was collected in small sub‐samples of the cohorts by the dietary record method. In 1987, food‐equivalent composites representing the average food intake of each cohort at baseline were collected locally and analyzed in a central laboratory. The vital status of all participants was verified after 25 years of follow‐up. The average intake of vitamin C was strongly inversely related to the 25‐year stomach‐cancer mortality (r = –0.66, p = 0.01), also after adjustment for smoking and intake of salt or nitrate. The average intake of α‐carotene, β‐carotene, and α‐tocopherol were not independently related to mortality from lung, stomach or colorectal cancer, nor was vitamin C related to lung and colorectal cancer. © 1995 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.