4.7 Article

Dietary fiber intake and head and neck cancer risk: A pooled analysis in the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology consortium

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 141, Issue 9, Pages 1811-1821

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.30886

Keywords

dietary fiber intake; INHANCE; head and neck cancer; laryngeal cancer; oral cavity and pharyngeal cancer

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute (NCI) at National Institutes of Health (NIH) (The INHANCE Pooled Data Project) [R03CA113157]
  2. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) at the NIH (INHANCE Pooled Data Project) [R03DE016611]
  3. Italian Association for Research on Cancer (AIRC)
  4. Italian League Against Cancer
  5. Italian Ministry of Research (Italy Multicenter study)
  6. Swiss Research against Cancer/Oncosuisse (Swiss study) [KFS-700, OCS-1633]
  7. NIH (Los Angeles study) [P50CA090388, R01DA011386, R03CA077954, T32CA009142, U01CA096134, R21ES011667]
  8. UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center (Alper Research Program for Environmental Genomics) (Los Angeles study)
  9. NIH (Boston study) [R01CA078609, R01CA100679]
  10. NCI, The Intramural Program of the NCI (US multicenter study)
  11. NIH (MSKCC study) [R01CA051845]
  12. Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, Culture and Technology of Japan [Japan study] [17015052]
  13. Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan (Third-Terrn Comprehensive 10-Year Strategy for Cancer Control) [Japan study] [H20-002]
  14. NCI [North Carolina study] [R01CA90731-01]
  15. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) [North Carolina study] [P30ES010126]
  16. AIRC [Milan study)] [10068]
  17. Italian Foundation for Cancer Research (FIRC) [Milan study]
  18. Italian Ministry of Education [Milan study] [PAIN 2009 X8YCBN]
  19. JSPS [15K21283]
  20. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17015052, 15K21283] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The possible role of dietary fiber in the etiology of head neck cancers (HNCs) is unclear. We used individual-level pooled data from ten case-control studies (5959 cases and 12,248 controls) participating in the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology (INHANCE) consortium, to examine the association between fiber intake and cancer of the oral cavity/pharynx and larynx. Odds Ratios (ORs) and their 95% Confidence Intervals (as) were estimated using unconditional multiple logistic regression applied to quintile categories of non-alcohol energy-adjusted fiber intake and adjusted for tobacco and alcohol use and other known or putative confounders. Fiber intake was inversely associated with oral and pharyngeal cancer combined (OR for 5th vs. 1st quintile category = 0.49, 95% CI: 0.40-0.59; p for trend <0.001) and with laryngeal cancer (OR = 0.66, 95% CI: 0.54-0.82, p for trend <0.001). There was, however, appreciable heterogeneity of the estimated effect across studies for oral and pharyngeal cancer combined. Nonetheless, inverse associations were consistently observed for the subsites of oral and pharyngeal cancers and within most strata of the considered covariates, for both cancer sites. Our findings from a multicenter large-scale pooled analysis suggest that, although in the presence of between-study heterogeneity, a greater intake of fiber may lower HNC risk.

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