Dietary Lycopene and Disease Risk
Breast Cancer Critical Findings
Disease |
First |
Study Title and |
Date |
Abstract |
Study Type |
G.Tom |
P.Tom |
F.Tom |
Lyco |
Other |
Cancer: breast |
Potischman N |
Breast cancer and dietary and plasma concentrations of carotenoids and vitamin A. |
1990 |
A case-control study of breast cancer was conducted in Buffalo. Participants completed a food frequency questionnaire and donated a fasting blood sample before definitive workup for breast masses. Dietary and plasma concentrations of carotenoids and retinol for 83 women found to have breast cancer were compared with those of 113 women found to be free of breast cancer (control subjects). There were no case-control differences in dietary estimates of vitamin A intake or in plasma alpha-carotene and lycopene. However, subjects with breast cancer had lower concentrations of plasma beta-carotene than did control subjects (P = 0.02). There was no overall association between plasma retinol and breast cancer but a positive relationship was observed between retinol and breast cancer in the subgroup with low beta-carotene values. These results suggest that low plasma beta-carotene is associated with increased risk of breast cancer. Other studies will need to determine whether low carotene oncentrations are a subtle effect of the disease or might be causally related to breast cancer. |
CC |
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N |
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Cancer: breast |
Zhang S |
Measurement of retinoids and carotenoids in breast adipose tissue and a comparison of concentrations in breast cancer cases and control subjects. |
1997 |
A case-control study of the associations of retinoids and specific carotenoids with breast cancer using concentrations of these nutrients in breast adipose tissue was conducted among women attending a breast clinic in the Boston area in 1989-1992. Breast adipose tissue was collected during breast biopsy. Cases (n = 46) were women whose biopsies revealed invasive or in situ breast cancer; control subjects (n = 63) were women whose biopsies revealed benign disease. We observed inverse associations between breast adipose concentrations of retinoids and carotenoids and risk of breast cancer, although not all were statistically significant. The multivariate-adjusted odds ratio comparing women above the median value of the control group for retinol with those below or equal to the median was 0.71 (95% CI: 0.26, 1.93; NS); corresponding odds ratios were 0.61 (95% CI: 0.23, 1.64; NS) for retinyl palmitate, 0.30 (95% CI: 0.11, 0.85) for beta-carotene, 0.32 (95% CI: 0.11, 0.94) for lycopene, and 0.68 (95% CI: 0.27, 1.73; NS) for lutein/zeaxanthin. There was a nonsignificant positive correlation (r = 0.23, P = 0.15) between breast adipose tissue concentrations of retinol and dietary intake of preformed vitamin A, including supplements measured by using a food-frequency questionnaire. No correlation was found between breast adipose concentrations of carotenoids and intake of dietary carotenoids. These data suggest that higher breast adipose concentrations of retinoids and some carotenoids may be associated with decreased risk of breast cancer and that further examination of these relations is warranted. |
CC tissue |
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(-) |
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Cancer: breast |
Dorgan JF |
Relationships of serum carotenoids, retinol, alpha-tocopherol, and selenium with breast cancer risk: results from a prospective study in Columbia, Missouri (United States) |
1998 |
To evaluate relationships of serum carotenoids, alpha-tocopherol, selenium, and retinol with breast cancer prospectively, we
conducted a case-control study nested in a cohort from the Breast Cancer Serum Bank in Columbia, Missouri (United States).
Women free of cancer donated blood to this bank in 1977-87. During up to 9.5 years of follow-up (median = 2.7 years), 105 |
CC nested |
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(-) |
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Cancer: breast |
Ito Y |
A study on serum carotenoid levels in breast cancer patients of Indian women in Chennai (Madras), India. |
1999 |
Two-hundred and six breast cancer cases were histologically confirmed breast cancer diagnoses at the Cancer Institute
in Chennai (Madras), India. One-hundred and fifty hospital controls were patients who had cancer at any site other than
breast and gynecological organs, and 61 healthy controls were persons accompanying patients in the Cancer Institute.
Serum levels of carotenoids such as beta-carotene, lycopene, cryptoxanthin, and zeaxanthin & lutein were determined
by HPLC. Serum levels of total carotenes and total carotenoids including beta-carotene, which reflects food intake of
colored vegetables and fruits and has a protective role for certain sites of cancer, were significantly lower among breast
cancer cases and hospital controls compared to healthy controls, especially in post-menopausal women. Serum
carotenoid levels appeared to change with menopausal status. Serum beta-carotene levels tended to be lower among |
CC serum |
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N? |
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Cancer: breast |
Simon MS |
An Evaluation of Plasma Antioxidant Levels and the Risk of Breast Cancer: A Pilot Case Control Study. |
2000 |
Antioxidant micronutrients found in fruits and vegetables have been shown in numerous studies to be protective against
cancer. There is limited information on the relationship between blood antioxidant micronutrient levels and cancer among
ethnic minorities. We conducted a pilot case-control study to evaluate the potential for accrual to a study of the
association of plasma levels of beta-carotene, retinol, lycopene, alpha-tocopherol, and gamma-tocopherol with breast
cancer risk among African American and Caucasian women seen at a large university medical center in Detroit. Cases
included women with newly diagnosed invasive breast cancer who had not yet had any cancer-related therapy and who
were age-matched to controls within 5 years. Plasma levels of micronutrients were analyzed by high-pressure liquid
chromatography. Compared to the expected accrual based on cancer registry data, only 26% (11/42) of African American |
CC |
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N |
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Cancer: breast |
Hulten K |
Carotenoids, alpha-tocopherols, and retinol in plasma and breast cancer risk in northern Sweden. |
2001 |
OBJECTIVE: Using a nested case-referent design we evaluated the relationship between plasma levels of six carotenoids,
alpha-tocopherol, and retinol, sampled before diagnosis, and later breast cancer risk. RESULTS: Plasma concentrations of carotenoids were positively intercorrelated. In analysis of three cohorts as a group
none of the carotenoids was found to be significantly related to the risk of developing breast cancer. Similarly, no
significant associations between breast cancer risk and plasma levels of alpha-tocopherol or retinol were found. However,
in postmenopausal women from a mammography cohort with a high number of prevalent cases, lycopene was significantly CONCLUSION: In conclusion, no significant associations were found between plasma levels of carotenoids, alpha-tocopherol or retinol and breast cancer risk in analysis of three combined cohorts. However, results from stratified analysis by cohort membership and menopausal status suggest that lycopene and other plasma-carotenoids may reduce the risk of developing breast cancer and that menopausal status has an impact on the mechanisms involved. |
CC nested |
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(-) |
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Cancer: breast |
Toniolo P |
Serum carotenoids and breast cancer. |
2001 |
The consumption of vegetables and fruit may protect against many types of cancer, but research evidence is not
compelling for breast cancer. Carotenoids are pigments that are present in most plants and have known antioxidant
properties. Blood concentrations of carotenoids have been proposed as integrated biochemical markers of vegetable,
fruit, and synthetic supplements consumed. In a case-control study (270 cases, 270 controls) nested within a cohort |
CC nested |
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N? |
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Cancer: breast |
Ching S |
Serum levels of micronutrients, antioxidants and total antioxidant status predict risk of breast cancer in a case control study. |
2002 |
We performed a case control study to assess the association between serum micronutrient and antioxidant levels and the risk of breast cancer. Newly diagnosed breast cancer cases were recruited before any treatment and matched with controls randomly selected from the electoral roll. Blood samples were collected from 153 breast cancer cases and 151 controls. Serum samples were analyzed for retinol, alpha-tocopherol, lycopene, alpha- and beta-carotene by HPLC, and total antioxidant status by the Trolox-equivalent antioxidant assay. Serum albumin, bilirubin and uric acid levels were also determined. After adjustment for age at menarche, parity, dietary fat and alcohol intake, we observed the following reductions in odds ratios for breast cancer risk comparing the highest with the lowest quartiles: 0.47 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.24, 0.91] for beta-carotene; 0.53 (CI 0.28, 1.01) for retinol; 0.50 (CI 0.26, 0.97) for bilirubin and 0.47 (CI 0.24, 0.94) for total antioxidant status. We conclude that increased serum levels of beta-carotene, retinol, bilirubin and total antioxidant status are associated with reductions in breast cancer risk. |
CC |
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N? |
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Cancer: breast |
Sato R |
Prospective study of carotenoids, tocopherols, and retinoid concentrations and the risk of breast cancer. |
2002 |
Previous prospective studies have raised the possibility that the antioxidantproperties of carotenoids and vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) and the role of vitamin A (retinol) in cellular differentiation may be associated with a reduced risk of subsequent breast cancer. To investigate the association between serum and plasma concentrations of retinol, retinyl palmitate, alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, beta-cryptoxanthin, lutein, lycopene, total-carotenoids, alpha-tocopherol, and gamma-tocopherol with subsequent development of breast cancer, a nested case control study was conducted among female residents of Washington County, Maryland, who had donated blood for a serum bank in 1974 or 1989. Cases (n = 295) and controls (n = 295) were matched on age, race, menopausal status, and date of blood donation, and the analyses were stratified by cohort participation. Median concentrations of beta-carotene, lycopene, and total carotene were significantly lower in cases compared with controls in the 1974 cohort (13.1, 12.5, and 7.9% difference; P = 0.01, 0.04, and 0.04, respectively) and for lutein in the 1989 cohort (6.7% difference; P = 0.02). The risk of developing breast cancer in the highest fifth was approximately half of that of women in the lowest fifth for beta-carotene [odds ratio (OR) = 0.41; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.22-0.79; P trend = 0.007], lycopene (OR = 0.55; 95% CI 0.29-1.06; P trend = 0.04), and total carotene (OR = 0.55; 95% CI 0.29-1.03; P trend = 0.02) in the 1974 cohort. There was generally a protective association for other micronutrients in both cohorts, although none reached statistical significance. The results suggest that carotenoids may protect against the development of breast cancer. |
CC nested |
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(-) |
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Cancer: breast |
Sesso HD |
Dietary and plasma lycopene and the risk of breast cancer. |
2005 |
Lycopene is potentially effective in the prevention of breast cancer from laboratory and observational studies. Among
39,876 women initially free of cardiovascular disease and cancer, we first conducted a prospective cohort study of
dietary lycopene and its food sources. Participants completed a baseline food frequency questionnaire and provided
self-reports of breast cancer risk factors. Dietary lycopene levels were divided into quintiles, and lycopene food sources
were categorized. During 9.9 years of follow-up, 1,076 breast cancer cases were confirmed by medical record review.
In a nested case-control study, we then identified 508 breast cancer cases and 508 controls matched by age, smoking,
and follow-up time. Plasma lycopene and other carotenoids were measured. In the prospective cohort study, women with
increasing quintiles of dietary lycopene had multivariate relative risks (RR) of breast cancer of 1.00 (ref), 0.95, 1.00, 1.10,
and 1.00 (P, linear trend = 0.71). Women consuming <1.5, 1.5 to <4, 4 to <7, 7 to <10, and > or =10 servings/week of
tomato-based products had RRs of 1.00 (ref), 1.00, 1.20, 1.18, and 1.16 (P, linear trend = 0.11). No individual lycopene
food sources were associated with breast cancer. In the nested case-control study, women in increasing quartiles of plasma |
PC |
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N |
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N |
Diet lyco + food sources |
Cancer: breast |
Tamimi RM |
Plasma carotenoids, retinol, and tocopherols and risk of breast cancer. |
2005 |
The roles of carotenoids, retinol, and tocopherols in breast cancer etiology have been inconclusive. The authors prospectively assessed the relations between plasma alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, beta-cryptoxanthin, lycopene, lutein/zeaxanthin, retinol, alpha-tocopherol, and gamma-tocopherol and breast cancer risk by conducting a nested case-control study using plasma collected from women enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study. A total of 969 cases of breast cancer diagnosed after blood draw and prior to June 1, 1998, were individually matched to controls. The multivariate risk of breast cancer was 25-35% less for women with the highest quintile compared with that for women with the lowest quintile of alpha-carotene (odds ratio (OR) = 0.64, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.47, 0.88; p(trend) = 0.01), beta-carotene (OR = 0.73, 95% CI: 0.53, 1.02; p(trend) = 0.01), lutein/zeaxanthin (OR = 0.74, 95% CI: 0.55, 1.01; p(trend) = 0.04), and total carotenoids (OR = 0.76, 95% CI: 0.55, 1.05; p(trend) = 0.05). The inverse association observed with alpha-carotene and breast cancer was greater for invasive cancers with nodal metastasis. The authors conclude that some carotenoids are inversely associated with breast cancer. Although the association was strongest for alpha-carotene, the high degree of collinearity among plasma carotenoids limits our ability to conclude that this association is specific to any individual carotenoid. |
CC |
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N |
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Cancer: breast |
Thomson CA |
Plasma and dietary carotenoids are associated with reduced oxidative stress in women previously treated for breast cancer. |
2007 |
Dietary carotenoids show numerous biological activities, including antioxidant activity, induction of apoptosis, and inhibition of
mammary cell proliferation. Studies examining the role of carotenoid consumption in relation to breast cancer recurrence are
limited and report mixed results. We tested the hypothesis that breast cancer survivors with high dietary and plasma
carotenoids would show significantly lower levels of oxidative stress than breast cancer survivors with low dietary and plasma
carotenoid levels. Two hundred seven postmenopausal breast cancer survivors from the Women's Healthy Eating and Living
Study volunteered for this ancillary study. Dietary data were analyzed by the Arizona Food Frequency Questionnaire and
plasma carotenoids alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, lutein plus zeaxanthin, lycopene, and beta-cryptoxanthin and quantified
with high-performance liquid chromatography, and immunoaffinity chromatography-monoclonal antibody-based ELISAs were
used to analyze the urine samples for 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OhdG) and 8-iso-prostaglandin-F2alpha
(8-iso-PGF2alpha). The correlations between dietary and plasma carotenoids were 0.34 for beta-carotene, 0.46 for
alpha-carotene, 0.39 for beta-cryptoxanthin, 0.27 for lycopene, 0.30 for lutein plus zeaxanthin, and 0.30 for total carotenoids. |
CS |
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(-) |
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Cancer: breast |
Dorjgochoo T |
Plasma carotenoids, tocopherols, retinol and breast cancer risk: results from the Shanghai Women Health Study (SWHS). |
2009 |
Evidence from some previous studies suggests that lipophilic antioxidants, particularly carotenoids, may reduce the risk of breast cancer. We prospectively investigated the associations of plasma levels of tocopherols, retinol, carotenoids with the risk of developing breast cancer among Chinese women. We conducted a study of 365 incident breast cancer cases and 726 individually matched controls nested within a large cohort study of women aged 40-70 years at baseline. We observed no associations between breast cancer risk and any of the tocopherols, retinol, and most carotenoids. However, high levels of plasma lycopene other than trans, 5- and 7-cis or trans alpha-cryptoxanthin were inversely associated with the risk of developing breast cancer. Our results do not support an overall protective effect of lipophilic antioxidants on breast cancer risk. The few inverse associations observed for subtype of carotenoids may need to be confirmed in future studies. |
CC |
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(-) |
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Cancer: breast |
Kabat GC |
Longitudinal study of serum carotenoid, retinol, and tocopherol concentrations in relation to breast cancer risk among postmenopausal women. |
2009 |
BACKGROUND: Prospective studies have examined the association of serum and plasma carotenoids and micronutrients and breast cancer; however, to date, studies have only assessed exposure at one point in time. OBJECTIVE: This study analyzed baseline and repeated serum measurements of carotenoids, retinol, and tocopherols to assess their associations with postmenopausal breast cancer risk. ESIGN: Serum concentrations of alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, beta-cryptoxanthin, lycopene, lutein + zeaxanthin, retinol,
alpha-tocopherol, and gamma-tocopherol were measured in a 6% sample of women in the Women's Health Initiative clinical
trials at baseline and at years 1, 3, and 6 and in a 1% sample of women in the observational study at baseline and at year 3. RESULTS: After multivariable adjustment, risk of invasive breast cancer was inversely associated with baseline serum alpha-carotene concentrations (hazard ratio for highest compared with the lowest tertile: 0.55; 95% CI: 0.34, 0.90; P = 0.02) and positively associated with baseline lycopene (hazard ratio: 1.47; 95% CI: 0.98, 2.22; P = 0.06). Analysis of repeated measurements indicated that alpha-carotene and beta-carotene were inversely associated with breast cancer and that gamma-tocopherol was associated with increased risk. CONCLUSIONS: The present study, which was the first to assess repeated measurements of serum carotenoids and micronutrients in relation to breast cancer, adds to the evidence of an inverse association of specific carotenoids with breast cancer. The positive associations observed for lycopene and gamma-tocopherol require confirmation. This trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov as NCT00000611. |
PC |
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Cancer: breast |
Tamimi RM |
Circulating carotenoids, mammographic density, and subsequent risk of breast cancer. |
2009 |
Mammographic density is one of the strongest predictors of breast cancer risk. Recently, it has been suggested that
reactive oxygen species may influence breast cancer risk through its influence on mammographic density. In the current
study, we addressed this hypothesis and also assessed if the association between carotenoids and breast cancer risk
varies by mammographic density. We conducted a nested case-control study consisting of 604 breast cancer cases and
626 controls with prospectively measured circulating carotenoid levels and mammographic density in the Nurses' Health
Study. Circulating levels of alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, beta-cryptoxanthin, lycopene, and lutein/zeaxanthin were
measured. We used a computer-assisted thresholding method to measure percent mammographic density. We found no
evidence that circulating carotenoids are inversely associated with mammographic density. However, mammographic density
significantly modified the association between total circulating carotenoids and breast cancer (P heterogeneity = 0.008).
Overall, circulating total carotenoids were inversely associated with breast cancer risk (P trend = 0.01). Among women in |
CC |
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