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Department of Epidemiology, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health [M. B. T., A. I. N., J. S. J.], and Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center [M. B. T., A. I. N., J. S. J.] and Department of Medicine [A. I. N.], College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032; South Carolina Cancer Center, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29203 [R. M. B.]; Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7080 [R. S. S.]; Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, Los Angeles, California 90033 [R. W. H.]; Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267-0529 [C. F-P.]; and Cancer Prevention Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington 98109 [J. D. P.]
| Abstract |
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2 h/week) was more strongly associated with reduced risk for advanced adenomas (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.21.0) than with reduced risk for nonadvanced adenomas (OR, 0.8; 95% CI, 0.51.2). Apart from these differences, most other risk factors, including body size and cigarette smoking were similar in their association with advanced and nonadvanced adenomas, suggesting that many risk factors for colorectal neoplasia may be important to adenoma formation but not to dysplasia per se. | Introduction |
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The study of dysplasia is complicated by inconsistent use of the terms severe dysplasia, CIS, and intramucosal carcinoma. Generally, pathologists call abnormal cellular growth that is confined to the intraepithelial layer and does not cross the muscularis mucosae either severe dysplasia or CIS; they call abnormal cellular growth that invades the lamina propria but does not invade the submucosa intramucosal carcinoma (7) . Invasion beyond the muscularis mucosae is classified as clinically important invasive cancer. In this study, we classified adenomas as advanced if they were highly dysplastic but did not extend beyond the muscularis mucosa. Among endoscopically screened subjects, we identified those with severe dysplasia, CIS, or intramucosal carcinoma. We compared these subjects with a group who had nonadvanced adenomas (those with none, mild, or moderate dysplasia) and a polyp-free control group.
| Materials and Methods |
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Study Design.
Four of these studies were colonoscopy-based studies of self-referred or selected populations (CU, UM, UNC, and WF); the USC study was a sigmoidoscopy-based screening study. The four colonoscopy-based case-control studies were selected for the primary analyses because they represented the U.S. colonoscopy-based studies that were completed when pooling began in 1996. The sigmoidoscopy-based study was added for secondary analyses of left-sided lesions. The studies also differed in the mode of interview: two primarily used telephone interviews after colonoscopy (CU and UNC); two used mailed questionnaires sent before the colonoscopies (UM and WF); and one used in-person interviews subsequent to the sigmoidoscopy (USC).
Eligibility Criteria.
Eligibility requirements for the four colonoscopy-based studies were similar in regard to age (three included subjects 30 years of age and older, the other included only those 35 years and older), language (English-speaking), sex (male and female), and exclusions based on prior medical conditions (prior colorectal cancer, history of inflammatory bowel disease, and familial adenomatous polyposis). The sigmoidoscopy-based study restricted the study population to ages 5075. Only some studies included subjects who had a history of adenomas, the others only included subjects with no previous diagnosed adenomas. Therefore, we restricted all of the analyses to subjects with newly diagnosed adenomas who did not have a previous history of adenomas. Because only some studies collected data on subjects with hyperplastic polyps, we restricted the control group to those without adenomatous and without hyperplastic polyps. We examined the impact such a restriction might have on our results through the use of secondary analyses that included in the groups with advanced and nonadvanced adenomas only those subjects without hyperplastic polyps.
Case Definition.
All five of the centers were originally asked to contribute all of the cases of CIS from their respective studies. However, because of differences in terminology across studies as well as variations in the number of cases from each site, we requested all of the slides of severe dysplasia, CIS, and intramucosal carcinoma from each site for uniform pathologic review (C. M. F-P.). We also reviewed a random sample of nonadvanced adenomas. Our independent pathologist agreed with the diagnosis of the individual center pathologists 82% of the time; details of the reliability study are described elsewhere (34)
. The numbers of advanced adenoma cases from each study site were 76 (CU), 18 (UM), 17 (UNC), 15 (USC), and 8 (WF). As most pooled analyses rely on the case diagnosis of each center, the original case definition was used for the main analyses. However, we performed additional analyses using the results from the uniform slide review.
Comparison Groups.
We used two comparison groups. The first was the standard comparison group for most case-control studies of adenomas: individuals found by colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy to be polyp-free. The numbers of polyp-free controls supplied by each study site were 508 (CU), 707 (UM), 507 (UNC), 100 (USC), and 144 (WF). The second was a comparison group of subjects with adenomas that had no, mild, or moderate dysplasia. This second group was selected so that risk factors for progression could be examined. We selected the nonadvanced adenoma cases using a 1:4 matching scheme, matching them to the cases of advanced adenomas by sex and age within 5 years. The numbers of adenoma cases used for comparison from each study site were 269 (CU), 72 (UM), 68 (UNC), 60 (USC), and 32 (WF).
Exposure Variable Definition.
We developed definitions for exposure variables using questionnaire data on smoking, alcohol use, body size, family history, physical activity, reproductive history, selected dietary variables, and demographic variables including age, sex, race, and educational status. These definitions were created after reviewing all five of the questionnaires but before conducting the analyses. Questionnaires across the five studies differed in focus, and some exposures were not available for all of the studies. For example, reproductive history data and aspirin use were not available for all of the studies. All five of the studies used a food frequency questionnaire to assess dietary intake; two used variations of the Block questionnaire (CU and UNC), and the other three used variations of the Willett questionnaire (UM, USC, and WF). Not all of the studies provided the same nutrient and food group data; here we restricted our analyses to dietary fat, dietary fiber, and caloric intake. Other differences limited the study of certain exposures. For example, some studies had collected detailed alcohol use histories, but others had collected only data on current or recent alcohol intake. Therefore, only current alcohol use could be assessed. For the dietary data, we defined as outliers any data points that were >3 SDs from the logarithm of the mean.
Statistical Analysis.
For univariate analyses, we assessed differences across the three outcome groups (the cases with advanced adenomas, the cases with nonadvanced adenomas, and the polyp-free controls) using ANOVA for continuous variables, the
2 test for categorical variables, and Fishers exact test for small cell counts (35)
. For multivariate analyses, we used unordered polytomous logistic regression to analyze all three of the outcome groups simultaneously (36)
.
The unordered polytomous logistic model produces two sets of coefficients, one for the comparison of advanced adenomas with polyp-free controls and a second for the comparison of nonadvanced adenoma cases with polyp-free controls; these coefficients are exponentiated to produce the ORs. The coefficients and SEs are used to estimate the 95% CI. We used the exponentiated difference in these coefficients (or equivalently, the ratio of the OR for advanced adenoma cases versus polyp-free controls to the OR for nonadvanced adenoma cases versus polyp-free controls) as an estimate of the capacity of a given risk factor to distinguish cases with advanced dysplasia from cases with nonadvanced adenomas.
We estimated these regression models with male and female cases combined using sex-specific indicator variables for sex-specific exposures (e.g., HRT). Indicator variables for study site were used to control for site-specific differences. First, a saturated model containing all of the relevant exposure variables was estimated. Then variables were removed from this saturated model based on log likelihood tests (36) . Parameter estimates for variables remaining in the model were also examined with the fuller model to assess confounding. The unordered polytomous model requires that the same set of covariates be used for all of the case groups. Thus, variables remaining in the final model indicate risk factors for at least one but not necessarily both case groups. The overall fit of the model was assessed using the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test for separate pairs of logistic models (36) . Binary logistic regression was also used to assess pathologic characteristics such as size, histology, and location of adenoma in regard to risk for advanced adenomas relative to nonadvanced adenoma cases.
| Results |
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35 years of smoking) was related to risk of both advanced and nonadvanced adenomas in men younger than 65 years (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 0.66.5; OR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.24.5, respectively) but not in men 65 years or older (OR, 0.9; 95% CI, 0.33.0; OR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.52.5, respectively).
We performed several different secondary analyses on the best-fitting model presented in Table 2
(data not shown). First, we estimated this model using only cases confirmed through uniform pathologic review. In this analysis, HRT was no longer related to advanced adenomas (OR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.42.8). Otherwise, overall interpretations did not change. Second, we examined only left-sided lesions from the four colonoscopy-based studies combined with the one sigmoidoscopy-based study; such analyses did not dramatically alter the results. Third, we restricted the model to subjects with lesions diagnosed in the colon (as opposed to rectum); there were no major differences in findings. Fourth, we restricted the case group to those subjects who did not also have a diagnosis of hyperplastic polyps, which also did not change the findings.
Table 4
summarizes the results from a multivariate logistic model examining pathologic characteristics (i.e., size, histology, and location of lesion), comparing cases of advanced adenomas with nonadvanced adenoma cases. Larger size (OR, 6.1; 95% CI, 3.211.6), tubulovillous histology (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.03.4), and rectal location (OR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1.15.2) were associated with risk of advanced adenomas. Because of the correlation between dysplasia, size, and histology, we reran our main models to see if the associations differed if we compared the following groups: (a) those with advanced adenomas (in terms of dysplasia), large size, and any villous component versus (b) those with nonadvanced adenoma, small size, and tubular histology versus polyp-free controls. Combining all three of the classifications meant the case groups were smaller (and CIs wider; group a had 73 subjects compared with 119 and group b had 178 compared with 441 in the analyses we present); however, the overall interpretations did not change. For example, physical activity was related to group a but not group b in men (OR, 0.5 versus 1.0) and HRT was more strongly related to group a than group b in women (OR, 0.5 versus 0.9). Smoking, body size, and fiber had similar interpretations in the two different analyses.
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| Discussion |
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Physical Activity.
Physical activity has been consistently associated with both colorectal adenomas (37, 38, 39, 40, 41)
and cancer (14
, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48)
, despite the inconsistencies in the measurement instruments used across studies. Some studies (14
, 16) , but not all (49)
, have reported a stronger association with physical activity and larger adenomas. In the pooled data presented here, even after combining diverse measures, physical activity was more strongly associated with reduced risk of advanced adenomas than to reduced risk of nonadvanced adenomas and was seen only in men. Lack of an association in some studies of women may reflect the failure of measurement instruments to capture activities that are specific to women.
HRT.
We found that HRT was associated with a 60% decrease (OR, 0.4) in risk of advanced adenomas and a 30% decrease (OR, 0.7) in risk of nonadvanced adenomas. The reduction in risk associated with HRT ranges from 0.6 to 0.9 in studies of colorectal cancer (50)
. HRT has also been inversely related to risk of colorectal adenomas (27
, 51
, 52)
, but few data exist on potential difference by adenoma size. HRT may protect against colorectal neoplasia by reducing the likelihood of hypermethylation of the ER gene (27)
.
Cigarette Smoking.
The pooled data presented here add to the accumulating evidence that cigarette smoking is likely to be related to the early stages of adenoma initiation and formation, and not to growth or dysplasia. However, the existing data have been somewhat inconsistent on the role of cigarette smoking in colorectal neoplasia, perhaps because of methodologic differences. For example, one case-control study of colorectal CIS reported a 23-fold increase in risk associated with current heavy cigarette smoking (53)
, although the adenoma status of the comparison group was not known in this study. Two other studies have examined the association between cigarette smoking and dysplasia; one reported no differences by degree of dysplasia (54)
, whereas the other reported a stronger association for adenoma cases with severe dysplasia (55)
. It this latter study, the group with severe dysplasia did not include subjects with CIS or intramucosal carcinoma as defined here. Three studies supported a stronger association between cigarette smoking and larger adenomas (55, 56, 57)
, but all three compared cases with large adenomas to polyp-free controls. In the one study that explicitly compared large adenomas to small adenomas, no association was seen (18)
. One study reported that smoking in the distant past increases large adenomas (58)
, but this was not confirmed in another study (59)
.
Alcohol Consumption.
Intake of beer was more strongly associated with advanced adenomas than with nonadvanced adenomas, but these differences were not statistically significant. The specific association with beer has also been reported in other studies of colorectal neoplasia (4
, 60, 61, 62)
. The effect of alcohol on adenoma size has been mixed; one study supports an association with large size (63)
and another reports similar increases in risk of both small and large adenomas (64)
.
Study Challenges.
In all pooled studies (65)
, the analyses depend on the extent to which the individual survey instruments include the same risk factors and measure them in the same way. Defining exposures uniformly often meant sacrificing detail. Fortunately, several key variables, such as history of cigarette smoking, body size, and ever use of HRT, were measured in a very similar fashion by all of the questionnaires. Pooling data from different questionnaires may have led to bias in the estimates of risk factors for both nonadvanced adenomas and for advanced adenomas. Nevertheless, because the exposure variables were defined a priori and created without regard to outcome status, the bias was probably nondifferential, leading to underestimates of risk. Therefore, the estimates for risk factors presented here may be conservative. However, pooling questionnaires also may lead to residual confounding because summary variables are cruder; for positive confounding, this would lead to an overestimate of risk.
Whereas all of the sites had central review of all of their cases, we were concerned that there may be different pathologic criteria used at the five studies, especially because one site (CU) contributed substantially more cases of advanced adenomas than the other sites. Demographic considerations such as age and sex composition could not explain these differences. We collected pathologic slides of these cases, and a single pathologist rereviewed them using uniform review criteria. This review revealed that the majority of cases (82%) classified as advanced adenomas by other sites were also classified as advanced adenoma by our study pathologist (34) .
We reviewed only a sample of slides for the nonadvanced adenoma cases (34) , hence that group may have contained subjects with undetected advanced adenomas within this group. This type of nondifferential misclassification of outcome status would bias any comparisons between advanced adenomas and nonadvanced adenomas toward the null (and comparisons between the nonadvanced adenomas and polyp free controls away from the null), reducing the likelihood of detecting potential differences in risk factor associations (66) . Because the uniform slide review confirmed the status of the cases of advanced adenomas identified by other sites, the misclassification bias between the cases of advanced adenomas and polyp-free controls should not be substantial. Also, we found similar associations among pathologic characteristics, such as size and villous histology to those reported in a number of other studies, offering some evidence for the validity of our case definition.
Study Strengths.
One advantage of this study over another study on risk factors for colorectal CIS (53)
is that our control group was endoscopically neoplasia-free. Without a screened control group, it is impossible to determine whether risk factors are related to adenoma formation, growth, or dysplasia. We compared cases who had advanced adenomas with two comparison groups; we were therefore able to explore the impact of risk factors along different steps of the adenoma-carcinoma sequence. Also, by comparing risk factors in an unordered polytomous logistic model, we could formally evaluate statistical heterogeneity. Most studies examining risk factor differences by adenoma size compare a group who have large adenomas to polyp-free controls rather than to a group with small adenomas.
This study also benefits from some of the methodologic advantages of precursor studies. These include a reduced likelihood of recall bias and selection bias (4 , 67) . Recall bias is minimized in this study because all of the subjects underwent the same procedures, either colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy, and many were unaware of their case classification at the time of interview. In addition, because subjects with adenomas do not differ from control in symptomatology, they are unlikely to have changed behavior as a result of their adenomas. Selection bias was also minimized because polyp-free controls were identified by the same selection procedures as the case groups. Indications for colonoscopy (e.g., bleeding) were similar across case groups.
Summary.
Overall, this study suggests that there are few differences between risk factors for advanced adenomas and risk factors for nonadvanced adenomas. Given the difficulty in measurement and the probable misclassification across case groups, null findings can have alternative interpretations. One interpretation is that many risk factors for colorectal neoplasia may be important to adenoma formation but do not have an additional effect on dysplasia. However, there are at least two possible alternative explanations. The first is that the key risk factors for advanced adenomas have not been measured by these questionnaires or that the level of detail of these pooled data were not sufficient. The second is that the nondifferential misclassification between the advanced adenoma case group and the nonadvanced adenoma case group biased any potential differences toward the null. Whatever the final interpretation, risk factors for dysplasia itself remain to be identified.
Designing future epidemiological studies specifically to address the question of risk factors for intermediate steps along the adenoma-carcinoma sequence demands careful consideration of case definition and uniform pathologic review. It will also be helpful to incorporate information on molecular markers important to cancer progression, such as p53, known to be important in later stages of colorectal neoplasia because most adenomas do not progress to cancer. Understanding risk factors for advanced adenomas can help lead to the development of more targeted, less invasive, colorectal screening recommendations, as well as a clearer picture of pathways to neoplasia.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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1 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Epidemiology, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032. ![]()
2 The abbreviations used are: CIS, carcinoma in situ; CU, Columbia University; UM, University of Minnesota; UNC, University of North Carolina; USC, University of Southern California; WF, Wake Forest University; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; HRT, hormone replacement therapy. ![]()
Received 11/12/01; revised 3/22/02; accepted 4/ 3/02.
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