Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women. / Johnsen, Nina; Olsen, Anja; Thomsen, Birthe Lykke; Christensen, Jane; Egeberg, Rikke; Bach Knudsen, Knud; Loft, Steffen; Overvad, Kim; Tjønneland, Anne.

In: Cancer Causes & Control, Vol. 21, 2010, p. 153-162.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Johnsen, N, Olsen, A, Thomsen, BL, Christensen, J, Egeberg, R, Bach Knudsen, K, Loft, S, Overvad, K & Tjønneland, A 2010, 'Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women', Cancer Causes & Control, vol. 21, pp. 153-162. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-009-9445-5

APA

Johnsen, N., Olsen, A., Thomsen, B. L., Christensen, J., Egeberg, R., Bach Knudsen, K., Loft, S., Overvad, K., & Tjønneland, A. (2010). Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women. Cancer Causes & Control, 21, 153-162. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-009-9445-5

Vancouver

Johnsen N, Olsen A, Thomsen BL, Christensen J, Egeberg R, Bach Knudsen K et al. Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women. Cancer Causes & Control. 2010;21:153-162. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-009-9445-5

Author

Johnsen, Nina ; Olsen, Anja ; Thomsen, Birthe Lykke ; Christensen, Jane ; Egeberg, Rikke ; Bach Knudsen, Knud ; Loft, Steffen ; Overvad, Kim ; Tjønneland, Anne. / Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women. In: Cancer Causes & Control. 2010 ; Vol. 21. pp. 153-162.

Bibtex

@article{5b0e8cf0cdf711dea1f3000ea68e967b,
title = "Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women",
abstract = "This case-cohort study examined the association between plasma enterolactone concentration and incidence of colon and rectal cancer in the Diet, Cancer and Health cohort, which enrolled 57,053 participants aged 50-64. Information about diet and lifestyle was obtained by questionnaire, and data on prescriptions of antibiotics were obtained from the Danish Prescription Registry. Cases diagnosed during 5.9 years of follow-up and a randomly selected sample of the cohort had a plasma sample analyzed for enterolactone by time-resolved fluoro-immuno assay. Associations were analyzed by Cox proportional hazards model. A total of 244 colon cancer cases, 137 rectal cancer cases, and 370 sub-cohort members were included in the statistical analyses. For each doubling in enterolactone concentration, we found lower risk of colon cancer among women [IRR (95% CI) = 0.76 (0.60-0.96)] and a tendency toward lower risk of rectal cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 0.83 (0.60-1.14)]. Among men, a doubling in enterolactone tended to be associated with higher risk of colon cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 1.09 (0.89-1.34)] and was associated with statistically significantly higher risk of rectal cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 1.74 (1.25-2.44)]. Exclusion of antibiotics users strengthened the results slightly. In conclusion, with higher enterolactone levels, we found lower risk of colon cancer among women and higher risk of rectal cancer among men.",
author = "Nina Johnsen and Anja Olsen and Thomsen, {Birthe Lykke} and Jane Christensen and Rikke Egeberg and {Bach Knudsen}, Knud and Steffen Loft and Kim Overvad and Anne Tj{\o}nneland",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1007/s10552-009-9445-5",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "153--162",
journal = "Cancer Causes & Control",
issn = "0957-5243",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Plasma enterolactone and risk of colon and rectal cancer in a case-cohort study of Danish men and women

AU - Johnsen, Nina

AU - Olsen, Anja

AU - Thomsen, Birthe Lykke

AU - Christensen, Jane

AU - Egeberg, Rikke

AU - Bach Knudsen, Knud

AU - Loft, Steffen

AU - Overvad, Kim

AU - Tjønneland, Anne

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - This case-cohort study examined the association between plasma enterolactone concentration and incidence of colon and rectal cancer in the Diet, Cancer and Health cohort, which enrolled 57,053 participants aged 50-64. Information about diet and lifestyle was obtained by questionnaire, and data on prescriptions of antibiotics were obtained from the Danish Prescription Registry. Cases diagnosed during 5.9 years of follow-up and a randomly selected sample of the cohort had a plasma sample analyzed for enterolactone by time-resolved fluoro-immuno assay. Associations were analyzed by Cox proportional hazards model. A total of 244 colon cancer cases, 137 rectal cancer cases, and 370 sub-cohort members were included in the statistical analyses. For each doubling in enterolactone concentration, we found lower risk of colon cancer among women [IRR (95% CI) = 0.76 (0.60-0.96)] and a tendency toward lower risk of rectal cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 0.83 (0.60-1.14)]. Among men, a doubling in enterolactone tended to be associated with higher risk of colon cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 1.09 (0.89-1.34)] and was associated with statistically significantly higher risk of rectal cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 1.74 (1.25-2.44)]. Exclusion of antibiotics users strengthened the results slightly. In conclusion, with higher enterolactone levels, we found lower risk of colon cancer among women and higher risk of rectal cancer among men.

AB - This case-cohort study examined the association between plasma enterolactone concentration and incidence of colon and rectal cancer in the Diet, Cancer and Health cohort, which enrolled 57,053 participants aged 50-64. Information about diet and lifestyle was obtained by questionnaire, and data on prescriptions of antibiotics were obtained from the Danish Prescription Registry. Cases diagnosed during 5.9 years of follow-up and a randomly selected sample of the cohort had a plasma sample analyzed for enterolactone by time-resolved fluoro-immuno assay. Associations were analyzed by Cox proportional hazards model. A total of 244 colon cancer cases, 137 rectal cancer cases, and 370 sub-cohort members were included in the statistical analyses. For each doubling in enterolactone concentration, we found lower risk of colon cancer among women [IRR (95% CI) = 0.76 (0.60-0.96)] and a tendency toward lower risk of rectal cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 0.83 (0.60-1.14)]. Among men, a doubling in enterolactone tended to be associated with higher risk of colon cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 1.09 (0.89-1.34)] and was associated with statistically significantly higher risk of rectal cancer [IRR (95% CI) = 1.74 (1.25-2.44)]. Exclusion of antibiotics users strengthened the results slightly. In conclusion, with higher enterolactone levels, we found lower risk of colon cancer among women and higher risk of rectal cancer among men.

U2 - 10.1007/s10552-009-9445-5

DO - 10.1007/s10552-009-9445-5

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19844797

VL - 21

SP - 153

EP - 162

JO - Cancer Causes & Control

JF - Cancer Causes & Control

SN - 0957-5243

ER -

ID: 15711738