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1 Division of Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota and 2 Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland
Requests for reprints: Andrew Flood, Division of Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, 1300 South Second Street, Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN 55454. Phone: 612-624-2891; Fax: 612-624-0315. E-mail: flood{at}epi.umn.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Colorectal cancer calcium diet supplements prospective study women
| Introduction |
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Despite the biological plausibility of a calcium effect, earlier reviews and metaanalyses of the epidemiologic literature concluded that calcium intake does not have a significant effect on reduction of risk for colorectal cancer, or perhaps might only have a weak effect (3-5). Recent findings, however, have provided evidence to suggest that calcium does in fact have an important inverse association with colorectal neoplasia. Among these were two observational studies of adenoma recurrence, each showing reductions in risk for those with high intakes of calcium at baseline (6, 7) and eight reports from prospective cohort studies of calcium intake and incident colorectal cancer, all indicating reduced risk with higher calcium intake, although not always with statistical significance for all subanalyses (8-15). Additionally, in two separate double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials of calcium supplements, investigators found reductions in rates of adenoma recurrence (by 15% and 34% compared with placebo group) over 3 to 4 years of follow-up in patients with a history of adenomas (16, 17). In a third clinical trial of a combination supplement containing calcium and a variety of antioxidants, there was a similar 15% reduction in patients with recurrent adenomas in the intervention group compared with controls (18). Taken together, these recent studies suggest that the earlier reviews may have been premature in discounting the place that calcium might have in influencing risk of colorectal cancer.
In this paper, we present data from a prospective study of diet and colorectal cancer in a cohort of women selected from participants in a breast cancer-screening program. These analyses include specific consideration of calcium source (diet versus supplement) as well as anatomic subsite (colon versus rectum and distal colon versus proximal colon).
| Materials and Methods |
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Participants subsequently completed a mailed questionnaire during three separate follow-up periods: 1987 to 1989, 1992 to 1995, and 1995 to 1998. Nonresponders to the questionnaires received vigorous follow-up including repeated mailings and phone calls.
For the purposes of the current analysis, entry into the analytic cohort took place at the time of the dietary assessment (1987-1989). We excluded from the study women who did not complete a questionnaire at that stage (n = 9,738), women with a diagnosis of colorectal cancer at the 1987 to 1989 questionnaire or earlier (n = 479), women whose reported entry date occurred after their exit date (n = 6, see definition of exit dates below), and women who skipped more than 30 items on their food frequency questionnaires or who had a reported total energy intake > 3,800 or < 400 kcal/day (n = 5,647). For this study, we also excluded 207 women with implausibly high intakes of calcium (reported level of consumption exceeding 3,000 mg/day), leaving 45,354 women in the final analytic cohort. Including women reporting consumption of more than 3,000 mg/day in the analyses did not materially alter the results (data not shown).
Cohort Follow-up
Follow-up began with completion of the dietary questionnaire (1987-1989). We defined "end of study date" as the date the subject completed the 1995 to 1998 questionnaire, or if the subject did not complete a 1995 to 1998 questionnaire, as the date of last contact in the 1995 to 1998 follow-up period. For participants not known to be deceased and with whom we had no contact in the 1995 to 1998 follow-up period, we imputed an end of study date by estimating the date on which subjects would have completed the 1995 to 1998 questionnaire (using mean time intervals from the rest of the cohort) had they actually completed one. We defined exit date from the study as the earliest among end of study date, date of colorectal cancer diagnosis, or date of death from cause other than colorectal cancer.
In the final analytic cohort, 90.3% (40,946 women) had complete follow-up through 1995 to 1998, meaning their exit date corresponded to either the date of their first colorectal cancer diagnosis, the date they filled out the 1995 to 1998 questionnaire, or their date of death from a cause other than colorectal cancer.
Case Ascertainment
We identified colorectal cancer cases from self-reports on the 1992 to 1995 and 1995 to 1998 questionnaires, from statewide cancer registries, and from the National Death Index (through 1997). We obtained pathology reports for 244 (79%) of the 309 women who provided self-reports of a diagnosis of colorectal cancer. The pathology reports confirmed 229 (94%) of the cases as adenocarcinoma of the colon or rectum (ICD-0 site codes 153.0-153.4 and 153.6-153.9 for colon cancer and 154.0-154.1 for rectal cancer). Because of this high correspondence between the self-reports and medical records, we included as cases the remaining 65 self-reports of colorectal cancer without pathology reports. Exclusion of these 65 cases did not materially affect the results (data not shown). Women with pathology reports contradicting self-reported colorectal cancers were not included as cases, unless they also appeared in a state cancer registry as described below. Pathology reports obtained for self-reported conditions unrelated to colorectal cancer identified 16 more cases of colorectal cancer. A search of the National Death Index identified an additional 107 individuals with death certificates indicating a diagnosis of colorectal cancer. Finally, we used last-known place of residence for each subject to match against state cancer registries for those states whose registries consented to participate in the study (accounting for 73.5% of the analytic cohort). Subjects residing in states with participating registries did not differ in any material way with respect to distribution of risk factors from subjects residing in states whose registries did not consent to participate. This procedure resulted in the identification of a further 65 colorectal cancer cases. Thus, the total number of cases in the analytic cohort over the follow-up period was 482.
Dietary Assessment
With the 1987 to 1989 questionnaire, respondents completed a 62-item National Cancer Institute/Block food frequency questionnaire to assess usual dietary intake over the previous year. Detailed descriptions of this food frequency questionnaire and its validity have appeared elsewhere (19-21). Software designed for this questionnaire yielded estimates of daily intakes for total energy, macronutrients, and micronutrients including calcium (21). A separate series of questions in the 1987 to 1989 questionnaire assessed intake of calcium from supplements, either multivitamin-type or calcium-specific.
Statistical Analysis
We used Cox proportional hazards regression (PROC PHREG in SAS version 6.12) with age as the underlying time metric to generate risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for calcium from diet, calcium from supplements, and total calcium (the sum of dietary and supplemental calcium). All P values were two-sided. To test for trend, we entered calcium into the model as a continuous term.
We derived energy-adjusted dietary values using the residual method (for example, the mean value for dietary calcium in the analytic cohort added to the residual of dietary calcium regressed on total energy for each individual) as described by Willett (22). In analyzing calcium from supplements, because the distribution of intake was highly skewed (over half the cohort reported no calcium from supplements) we created four categories based on fixed levels of intake rather than dividing the cohort into quantiles. The four categories were 0 mg/day of calcium from supplements (n = 25,441), 1 to 400 mg/day (n = 9,452), 401 to 800 mg/day (n = 4,176), and > 800 mg/day (n = 6,285). For calcium from supplements and for total calcium, we did not adjust the energy intake of calcium from supplements because intake of a nutrient from supplement use is not fundamentally related to energy intake as would be a nutrient derived from food. Thus, in order to arrive at a single value for total calcium, we added the energy-adjusted dietary calcium to the raw value for intake of calcium from supplements. Using alternative energy adjustment methods such as the multivariate nutrient density method, the standard method (including total energy as a covariate), or the partition method for any of the analyses, with each offering a potentially unique interpretive perspective (23-25), did not materially affect the final results.
We also considered additional variables for inclusion into our models as potential confounders. In evaluating these risk factors, we entered each separately (by quintiles for continuous variables) into the energy-adjusted models for dietary and total calcium and the model for calcium from supplements. We judged a change of > 10% in the risk estimate for the highest quintile/category of calcium intake compared with the lowest from the age and energy-adjusted only model as evidence for confounding. We tested the following variables in this manner: smoking (ever/never), history of menopausal hormone replacement therapy (yes/no), education (through high school/more than high school), body mass index (kg/m2), height, weekday physical activity index expressed in units of Metabolic Equivalent Time (26), alcohol, folate, vitamin D, fiber, meat, fat, fruits, vegetables, grains, and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory (NSAID) drug use (yes/no). NSAIDs included aspirin, ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin, Nuprin), Naprosyn, and other pain-relieving drugs, but excluded Tylenol. We defined women to be users of NSAIDs if they had used these drugs at least once a week for at least 1 year. After performing all of these tests, we found that none of the factors listed above generated any material changes in either the dietary calcium model, the total calcium model, or the supplemental calcium model (data not shown), and thus did not include them in any of the final calcium models. Likewise, adjusting for reported colorectal cancer-screening or restricting the cohort to only those subjects who had no prior history of breast disease resulted in no qualitative differences in risk estimates. Simultaneous inclusion of all these potential confounders in the proportional hazards regression models also did not produce any material changes in the results from those obtained in the age- and energy-adjusted models.
| Results |
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| Discussion |
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It is especially notable that the risk reduction in the BCDDP cohort was present regardless of the source of calcium, that the sources of calcium were almost completely uncorrelated, and that simultaneously consuming high levels of calcium from both diet and supplements further reduced risk. These observations suggest that it was calcium per se, and not merely dairy foods or some other unmeasured confounding variable that we did not include in our analyses, that accounted for the reduction in risk.
Although we observed an inverse association regardless of the source of calcium, there did seem to be a difference between calcium from diet and calcium from supplements in the level at which we observed the risk reduction. For calcium from diet, intake of >400 mg/day resulted in a marked reduction in risk, whereas in the case of calcium from supplements, we observed no association at an intake of < 800 mg/day. This discrepancy might be attributed to differences between true intake and self-reported estimates of intake for supplements and diet, or it may be the result of differences between the bioavailability of calcium from diet as compared with that from supplements.
Our results provide additional evidence that calcium intake is inversely related to colorectal cancer. Among the earlier reports (prior to 1997) only two prospective studies showed statistically significant, inverse associations with colorectal cancer or adenomas (27, 28), whereas eight others did not (29-35). Many of these studies were relatively small, however, and were thus underpowered to observe relative risks on the order of 0.75 to 0.85, the magnitude of risk reduction commonly observed in subsequent clinical trials and prospective studies. In fact, six of the eight earlier studies did have nonsignificant risk estimates consistent with this range. As mentioned, since 1997, there have been eight additional prospective cohort studies (8-15), generally with greater power, and each of these reported inverse associations between calcium and colorectal cancer. In some cases, the associations were statistically significant only for subsets of the population or subclassifications of disease site [e.g., among women without a family history of colorectal cancer (9), for cancers of the colon but not the rectum (12), for distal rather than proximal colon (10), or among men but not women (10)]. In only one study, the NYU cohort, were there no statistically significant associations (8). Notwithstanding a relatively small study size (only 100 cases) in this cohort and thus wide confidence intervals, the relative risk associated with the high quartile of intake compared with the lowest was 0.71, consistent with the other studies. This body of literature from prior prospective studies together with the results from the present analyses and three clinical trials demonstrating the ability of calcium supplements to reduce adenomatous polyp recurrence (16-18), present a consistent picture of a modest but real reduction in risk, perhaps of 15% to 25%, with higher intakes of calcium (> 800-1,200 mg/day).
Of the 17 prospective studies that have considered calcium and colorectal neoplasia, only six (10, 12, 14, 15, 28, 34, 36) have undertaken subsite analyses. Of these, Wu et al. (10), Terry et al. (14), and Stemmermann et al. (28), the latter having very few cases, observed a more pronounced effect in the distal colon compared with the proximal colon, but only in the study by Wu et al. was the association more than marginal. By contrast, McCullough et al. (15) observed a stronger effect not in the distal but in the proximal colon, but only for total calcium and not dietary calcium or milk or dairy products. When comparing colon to rectum, Jarvinen et al. (12) and McCullough et al. both observed a difference (with the stronger effect in the colon), whereas Kampman et al. (34) and Terry et al. (14), saw no differences in risk estimates between these anatomic sites. In light of these few mixed findings, our results showing no substantial differences (or perhaps marginal ones) among subsites are consistent with the existing body of literature. Further studies are required before it will be possible to make more confident statements about the possible subsite specificity of the calcium effect, but at present, the evidence does not offer substantial support for any hypothesized differences in risk reduction from calcium intake between proximal and distal colon or between colon and rectum.
Our results, and the results from previous related studies, raise interesting questions with regard to the mechanism by which calcium may have the effect of reducing risk of colorectal cancer. If calcium acted by neutralizing secondary bile acids that would otherwise provide an irritative, proliferative stimulus to the epithelial lining of the colon, we would expect higher calcium concentration in the lumen to affect indicators of proliferation such that they would be decreased. Yet in 14 separate randomized clinical trials of calcium supplements or high-calcium (i.e., dairy) foods (37-50), 10 saw no change in proliferation rates in colorectal mucosal biopsies.
Of the four clinical trials that did see a reduction in proliferation rates, two were among familial adenomatous polyposis patients (47, 49) with the authors of one of these studies commenting that the effect was typically confined to individuals with high proliferation rates at baseline (47). In contrast to these results, however, Stern et al. (50) saw no notable changes in mucosal risk factors after a 9-month placebo-controlled trial of calcium supplementation in a similar population with familial polyposis. A third study saw a reduction in proliferation rates among patients with a family history of colorectal cancer, although without polyposis (49), and the final study showing a reduced proliferation rate with calcium supplementation saw the effect only in patients who received a dose of 2,000 mg/day (lower doses produced no effect; ref. 48). In one of the few studies that considered location of mitotic activity within the crypt, the authors observed that although calcium supplementation did not reduce overall proliferation rates, it did normalize the distribution of proliferating cells within the crypt (39). These latter observations do suggest that the effect of calcium may be subtler than merely reducing proliferation generally, and that it may act only at high doses (at least for calcium from supplements, consistent with our results), and that it may affect only subsets of the population. Furthermore, almost all of the proliferation studies relied on rectal biopsies (37, 39, 40, 42-44) and thus were unable to assess potentially different effects of calcium supplementation in the colon as distinct from the rectum. Nonetheless, the predominantly null results from these clinical trials do not provide strong evidence in favor of the hypothesis that calcium will reduce risk of colorectal cancer by downward influence on rates of proliferation in the epithelium.
Furthermore, proliferation rates themselves may not be indicative of future risk for colorectal neoplasia as described in a follow-up study by Sandler et al. (51) in which proliferation at baseline was, if anything, inversely correlated with risk of adenoma 3 years subsequently. Thus, although evidence accumulates that calcium has an inverse association with colorectal cancer, the evidence in support of the hypothesis that it does so by reducing the proliferative effects of secondary bile acids remains weak at best.
The presence of fat in the diet, because of its influence on the secretion of bile acids into the gut, should be an important risk factor for colorectal cancer if the hypothesized action of calcium to neutralize these bile acids in the lumen were to be truly related to risk of colorectal cancer. The epidemiological literature on fat and colorectal cancer, however, is not consistent (52). In particular, there was no association between fat and colorectal cancer in a separate analysis of the BCDDP cohort (53), and yet, we still observed a significant inverse association for calcium in this population. Again, these results are not consistent with neutralizing secondary bile acids as the primary mechanism by which calcium reduces risk of colorectal cancer.
Finally, we observed no difference in the calcium association across strata of dietary vitamin D, although it is important to recognize that dietary vitamin D is an imperfect surrogate for serum vitamin D because a large portion of circulating vitamin D derives from exposure to the sun, something for which we had no information in the BCDDP cohort. Other investigators have pointed out the decreasing local rates of colorectal cancer when moving from the north to the south and have postulated increased circulating vitamin D (a result of increased sun exposure) as a possible explanation (54). Given the high correlation between dietary calcium and dietary vitamin D (the primary sources of both were dairy foods), it is tempting to propose that the calcium effect we observed was simply the result of confounding by vitamin D. However, there was no correlation between dietary vitamin D and calcium from supplements, yet we still observed an inverse association between supplemental calcium and colorectal cancer. This does not exclude an important, independent role for vitamin D, but it does suggest that calcium in this case is not simply a surrogate for vitamin D intake.
If the ability of calcium in the colonic lumen to form inert soaps with secondary bile acids is not an explanation that satisfactorily accounts for the existing data on calcium and colorectal neoplasia, the alternative most likely involves a mechanism related to direct effects of calcium on the colonic epithelial cells. It is important to consider, however, that circulating levels of calcium are subject to tight homeostatic regulation and vary only within a narrow range. Therefore, whatever beneficial effect calcium may have on colorectal epithelial cells, it is not likely to be related to changes in serum concentration of the mineral. Lamprecht and Lipkin (2) summarize the cellular modes of action that can explain the effects of calcium in reducing risk of colorectal cancer through the activation of calcium-sensing receptors on the luminal surface of intestinal epithelial cells. These receptors are G proteincoupled receptors that activate diverse intracellular signaling pathways that can potentially influence epithelial cell differentiation. This mechanism could explain the ability of calcium to reduce the risk of colorectal neoplasia even though it has no effect on proliferation rates, although at the same time its serum concentration does not deviate from the narrow range of homeostatic control.
In summary, despite earlier reviews expressing some hesitation with respect to a judgment on calcium's beneficial effects, our study provides further evidence to support what is now an increasing body of literature indicating that calcium intake will reduce risk of colorectal cancer.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Received 3/16/04; revised 7/26/04; accepted 8/ 5/04.
| References |
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