Pre-adult famine exposure and subsequent colorectal cancer risk in women
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2017-04-01
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taverne
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nutritional deprivation during growth and development may contribute to colorectal cancer (CRC) risk in later life. METHODS: We studied 7906 women who were aged 0-21 years during the 1944-45 Dutch famine, who enrolled in the Prospect-EPIC study between 1993 and 1997. We used Cox proportional hazard analyses to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for colorectal (proximal, distal and rectal) cancer risk across self-reported famine exposure and exposure-age categories, while adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS: During a median of 17.3 years of follow-up, 245 CRC cases occurred. Moderately and severely famine-exposed women showed a respective 24% and 44% higher CRC risk compared with women who reported no exposure [HRmoderate 1.24 (95% CI: 0.93-1.64); HRsevere 1.44 (1.03-2.03); Ptrend 0.027]. This relation attenuated when adjusted for potential confounders [adjusted HRmoderate 1.15 (0.87-1.53); HRsevere 1.35 (0.96-1.90); Ptrend 0.091]. Stratified results suggested that severe famine exposure between 10 and 17 years of age was particularly related to CRC risk[adjusted HRmoderate 1.39 (0.91-2.11); HRsevere 1.76 (1.10-2.83); Ptrend 0.019; Pinteraction(famine*10-17yrs) 0.096]. Overall, we found no differences in famine effects across CRC subsites, but age-at-exposure stratified results suggested an increased risk for proximal CRC in those aged 10-17 years during exposure to the famine [adjusted HRmoderate 2.14 (1.06-4.32), HRsevere 2.96 (1.35-6.46); Ptrend 0.005]. Overall and within age-at-exposure categories, tests for subsite specific heterogeneity in famine effects were not significant. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that severe exposure to a short period of caloric restriction in pre-adult women may relate to CRC risk decades later.
Keywords
Colorectal cancer, adolescence, caloric restriction, cohort studies, famine, growth and development, metabolism, starvation, vulnerable periods, Adolescence, Growth and development, Starvation, Metabolism, Vulnerable periods, Famine, Cohort studies, Caloric restriction, Taverne, Epidemiology, Journal Article
Citation
Brand, M P, Peeters, P H M, van Gils, C H & Elias, S G 2017, 'Pre-adult famine exposure and subsequent colorectal cancer risk in women', International Journal of Epidemiology, vol. 46, no. 2, pp. 612-621. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyw121