Breaking Medical News Archive
Ovarian Cancer Risk and Consumption of Milk
Products and Lactose
Meta-Analysis of Epidemiological Studies Finds
Some Support for a Link
posted 08/08/05
An analysis of 21 studies that have investigated
the link between ovarian cancer and the consumption
of milk products and lactose has found some
support for the hypothesis that high intake
is associated with increased cancer risk. The
results of this analysis, published online
August 5, 2005 in the International Journal
of Cancer, the official journal of the International
Union Against Cancer (UICC), found that support
was stronger in cohort studies, compared to
case-control studies, which offered varying
results. The article is available via Wiley
InterScience at http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/ijc.
Since a positive correlation between ovarian
cancer risk and the consumption of milk products
and lactose was first reported in 1989, many
epidemiological studies have further examined
the relationship. However, these studies have
yielded conflicting conclusions. To better
understand the uncertain relationship, researchers
led by Susanna C. Larsson of the National Institute
of Environmental Medicine at the Karolinska
Institute in Sweden, conducted a meta-analysis
of relevant case-control and cohort studies.
The researchers sought reports that offered
data from a case-control, or cohort study on
the association between intakes of milk, yogurt,
cheese or lactose, and incidence of or mortality
from epithelial ovarian cancer. Studies also
had to present results as an odds ratio, or
relative risk, with 95 percent confidence intervals.
The researchers accepted three prospective
cohort studies, and 18 case-control studies
and performed a meta-analysis to determine
associations between consumption and cancer
risk.
Their analysis found notable differences between
case-control and cohort studies. Case-control
studies showed low-fat milk consumption negatively
associated, and whole milk consumption positively
associated, with the risk of ovarian cancer,
but offered no support for the involvement
of lactose in the development of ovarian cancer.
By contrast, prospective cohort studies indicated
that high intakes of milk may increase the
risk of ovarian cancer. They also revealed
a 13 percent increase in ovarian cancer risk
with a daily increase of 10 grams of lactose,
the approximate amount in one glass of milk.
When case-control and cohort studies were considered
in combination, yogurt consumption was associated
with a non-significant increase in cancer risk,
while cheese was not associated with risk.
The differences between the findings of case-control
studies and those of cohort studies could be
explained by a number of factors: selection
bias, recall bias or changes in dietary practices
after cancer diagnosis. They might also be
due to the time interval between diet assessment
and illness, since cohort studies may record
dietary practices decades before illness occurs,
while case-control studies assess diet around
the time of diagnosis. Other limitations of
this study include the observational nature
of the assessed studies, imprecise measurements
of diet, and publication bias.
Of note, the two studies that examined histological
subtypes of ovarian cancer found that the associations
with milk and lactose intakes were confined
to serous ovarian cancer, leading researchers
to advise, "future studies should consider
specific subtypes of ovarian cancer, and the
interrelationship between intakes of dairy
foods and lactose, genetic polymorphisms, and
ovarian cancer risk."
"In conclusion," they write, "prospective
cohort studies, but not case-control studies,
support the hypothesis that high intakes of
dairy foods and lactose may increase the risk
of ovarian cancer."
Article: "Milk, Milk Products, and Lactose
Intake and Ovarian Cancer Risk: A Meta-Analysis
of Epidemiological Studies." Susanna C.
Larsson, Nicola Orsini, and Alicja Wolk, International
Journal of Cancer; Published Online: Aug.
5, 2005 (DOI: 10.1002/ijc.21305).
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