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Diet, body mass and colorectal cancer: A case-referent study in Stockholm

✍ Scribed by Maria Gerhardsson De Verdier; Ulla Hagman; Gunnar Steineck; ÅKe Rieger; Staffan E. Norell


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
French
Weight
748 KB
Volume
46
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


A population-based case-referent study on diet (total energy, protein, fat, dietary fiber), body mass and colorectal cancer was performed in Stockholm in 19861988. The study included 1,081 subjects. The relative risks (RR. with a 95% confidence interval, highest versus lowest quintile) for colon cancer were as follows: total energy (I .7, I .O-3.0), protein (2.4, 1.5-4.0), total fat (2.2, 1.3-3.6), dietary fiber for men (0.5, 0.2-1. I), dietary fiber for women (I .2,0.7-2.3) and body mass (2.0, 1.3-3.1). The relative risks for rectal cancer were: total energy (2.4, 1.2-4.7), protein (3.6, 2.&6.4), total fat (2.5, 1 . 6 4.6), dietary fiber (0.5, 0.3-0.9), body mass for men (I .7, 0.7-4.0), and body mass for women (I .O, 0.5-1.9). Adjustment for physical activity, body mass (in the diet analysis), the abovementioned dietary factors (in the body mass analysis), and browned meat surface had little or no influence on the results.


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