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Department of Epidemiology and Surveillance Research, American Cancer Society, National Home Office, Atlanta, Georgia 30329-4251
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Experimental evidence suggests that alcohol interferes with folate absorption, transport, and metabolism, potentially limiting tissue folate stores (7) . Folate deficiency is implicated in carcinogenesis through interference with DNA synthesis and through the depletion of labile methyl groups widely used in biological methylation reactions (8) . The availability of S-adenosyl-methionine, the methyl donor widely used in biomolecule methylation, is dependent on both folate and methionine, thus deficient methionine supply may increase folate requirements and possibly contribute to carcinogenesis via abnormal DNA methylation (9) .
The primary objective of this study was to evaluate a possible interaction between folate and alcohol on incident breast cancer. We present data on consumption of alcohol, folate, methionine, and multivitamins as possible risk factors, in addition to examining possible interactions between those factors on breast cancer risk among 66,561 postmenopausal women in the American Cancer Society CPS2 -II Nutrition Cohort after 5 years of follow-up.
| Materials and Methods |
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Excluded from this analysis were women lost to follow-up from 1992 to 19971998 (n = 7,592), women with prevalent cancer (except non-melanoma skin cancer) at baseline (n = 11,601), and women with cirrhosis (n = 36). Women with unknown menopausal status (n = 604) or who were not postmenopausal (n = 4,247) were excluded because of the small number of cases occurring in this group (n = 105) and because our previous study had shown no association between alcohol and breast cancer in premenopausal women (11) . Also excluded were women whose calculated daily energy intake was outside the range of 550-3500 kcal/day or who were missing 15% or more of the dietary questions (n = 6,779), and who had missing alcohol data (n = 257).
This analysis included 1303 incident breast cancer cases, 1246 initially identified through self-report and 57 identified as interval deaths. Self-reported cases were verified through medical records (n = 1063) or state tumor registries (n = 183). Deaths were identified through linkage with the National Death Index. The death certificate listed breast cancer as a primary or contributory cause of death (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, codes 174.0174.9) during the interval from the date of enrollment in 1992 or 1993 through August 31, 1997, in women who had not reported having breast cancer at enrollment. We obtained additional information for 32 of the 57 incident deaths, including date of diagnosis, from tumor registries. For the remaining 25 deaths, we used the date of death as a proxy for date of diagnosis. We excluded an additional 108 self-reported breast cancers for which confirmed diagnosis was not obtained and 2 cases with missing year of diagnosis from this analysis.
Dietary Assessment.
Usual dietary intake of folate and ethanol was assessed using a semiquantitative 68-item FFQ, which is a modification of the brief "Health Habits and History Questionnaire" developed by Block et al. (10
, 12)
. Dietary and total nutrient intakes were estimated using the Diet Analysis System version 3.8a (13)
. Nutrient estimates were adjusted for total energy using the residuals method (14)
. Energy-adjusted correlations between the FFQ and four 24-h recalls were 0.77 for ethanol and 0.43 for dietary folate (overall nutrient mean r = 0.62; Ref. 15
).
Because folic acid from supplements is more bioavailable than that from dietary sources (especially after the legal limit on folic acid in multivitamins was raised to 400 µg in 1973 and before regular folate supplementation of grains beginning in 1996; Ref. 16 ), we also examined whether an interaction was present among users of multivitamins, using estimates of total folate and long-term supplement use. Total folate was estimated by adding dietary and supplemental sources reported on the FFQ, assuming that each multivitamin tablet contains 400 µg of folic acid. Respondents were asked to record how many vitamin tablets they took per day or per week. The two top quartiles of total folate almost exclusively represent folate from supplements (319.8 µg/day and higher). To assess long-term exposure to high folate levels, information on multivitamin use was taken from both the historical 1982 CPS-II questionnaire and the 1992 Nutrition Cohort questionnaire (17) . Multivitamin use was classified into four categories: (a) nonuse reported in both 1982 and 1992; (b) past use (any use reported in 1982, but none in 1992); (c) current use (any use 1992, but none in 1982); and (d) long-term use (any use reported in both 1982 and 1992). Blank multivitamin questions were interpreted as nonuse.
Statistical Analysis.
Cox proportional hazards modeling (18)
was used to calculate RR and 95% CIs for the relationship between total grams of ethanol/day, dietary and total folate intake (µg/day), dietary methionine (g/day), multivitamin use, and incident breast cancer while adjusting for potential confounders. Ethanol was categorized as none, 0.1 to <5, 5 to <10, 10 to <15, and 15+ g/day. Dietary folate (µg/day) and total folate (µg/day) were categorized in quartiles; methionine (g/day) was categorized in quintiles. The multivariate model for total folate did not include dietary folate or multivitamins; the multivariate model for multivitamin use did not include total folate.
Cox models were stratified by single year of age at enrollment. Potential confounders included in the multivariate models were race, education, family history of breast cancer (first-degree relative related by blood), history of a breast lump, mammographic history, HRT use, parity and age at first live birth, age at menarche, age at menopause, BMI, physical activity (hours of exercise/week in metabolic equivalents), adult weight gain, and energy (kcal/day) in quintiles.
Stratified analysis and multiplicative interaction terms for each main exposure were used to test the a priori hypothesis that high folate consumption would attenuate the positive association between alcohol use and breast cancer. The likelihood ratio test (19) was use to test for significance.
| Results |
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Results from multivariate models are shown in Table 1
. We observed an increased risk of breast cancer for
10 g ethanol/day when controlling for other breast cancer risk factors (P for trend = 0.01). In the highest category of ethanol consumption (
15 g/day), the relative risk of breast cancer was 1.26 (95% CI, 1.041.53) compared with nonusers. We found no association between risk of breast cancer and intake of dietary folate, total folate, methionine, or multivitamins. We found similar increases in breast cancer risk among women consuming
15 g alcohol/day for in situ (RR = 1.26), localized (RR = 1.24), and regional breast cancer (RR = 1.25; data not shown).
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300 µg/day and methionine
0.8 g/day. We found no statistically significant difference in breast cancer risk among these groups (RR = 1.22 and RR = 1.13 for 15+ g ethanol/day in low and high groups, respectively; data not shown). | Discussion |
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There are at least two possible reasons that our findings differ from those of the other published cohort studies. It is possible that our assessment of folate consumption is incomplete, given the brief FFQ that was used in our study relative to others (3, 4, 5) . Our FFQ may not accurately capture dietary folate consumption. However, multivitamin use, which is likely to be recorded with less error than specific foods, did not modify the association with alcohol; thus, it is unlikely that measurement error can entirely explain our results.
It is also possible that our length of follow-up is too short. It is hypothesized that folate acts early in carcinogenesis, so cases occurring within the first 5 years of follow-up may not benefit from a protective effect of high folate intake. However, when we looked at women who reported multivitamin use in both 1982 and 1992 (assuming that use was continuous), we still saw no evidence of a protective effect for long-term multivitamin use.
In summary, although we observed a positive association between the consumption of alcohol and risk of breast cancer, we cannot corroborate previous reports of an interaction between folate and alcohol consumption. Given the important public health implications for reducing the risk of breast cancer through adequate folate intake, it will be important to reevaluate this question in the future as our follow-up time increases.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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1 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Epidemiology and Surveillance Research, American Cancer Society, National Home Office, 1599 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, Georgia 30329-4251. Phone: (404) 929-6815; Fax: (404) 327-6450; E-mail: heather.feigelson{at}cancer.org ![]()
2 The abbreviations used are: CPS, Cancer Prevention Study; CI, confidence interval; RR, rate ratio; FFQ, food frequency questionnaire; HRT, hormone replacement therapy; BMI, body mass index. ![]()
Received 6/12/02; revised 10/28/02; accepted 11/25/02.
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