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1 Department Food and Chemical Risk Analysis, TNO Quality of Life, Zeist, the Netherlands; 2 Wageningen Centre for Food Sciences and NIZO Food Research, Department of Health and Safety, Ede, the Netherlands; and 3 Nutrition and Toxicology Research Institute Maastricht, Department of Epidemiology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands
Requests for reprints: Helena F. Balder, Department Food and Chemical Risk Analysis, TNO Quality of Life, P.O. Box 360, 3700 AJ Zeist, the Netherlands. Phone: 31-30-694-4794; Fax: 31-30-69-44070. E-mail: balder{at}voeding.tno.nl
| Abstract |
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Methods: The Netherlands Cohort Study was initiated in 1986 when a self-administered questionnaire on risk factors for cancer was completed by 120,852 subjects ages 55 to 69 years. After 9.3 years of follow-up through the Cancer Registry, 1,535 incident colorectal cancer cases (869 men and 666 women) were available. Nineteen of the 150 items in the validated dietary questionnaire related to consumption of specific types of fresh and processed meat. Heme iron content was calculated as a type-specific percentage of the total iron content and chlorophyll content of vegetables was derived from the literature.
Results: Multivariate rate ratios for quintiles of heme iron intake and colon cancer were 1.00, 0.98, 1.04, 1.13, and 1.29 (Ptrend = 0.10) among men and 1.00, 1.31, 1.44, 1.18, and 1.20 (Ptrend = 0.56) among women, respectively. No consistent associations were observed for rectal cancer. Rate ratios for colon cancer increased across successive quintiles of the ratio of heme/chlorophyll among men only (1.00, 1.08, 1.01, 1.32, and 1.43; Ptrend = 0.01). No associations were observed between fresh meat and colorectal cancer.
Conclusion: Our data suggest an elevated risk of colon cancer in men with increasing intake of heme iron and decreasing intake of chlorophyll. Further research is needed to confirm these results. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2006;15(4):71725)
| Introduction |
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An explanation for the inconsistent and relatively modest associations might be that not total red meat intake, defined by many authors as beef, pork, and lamb, but heme increases risk. Heme is the iron porphyrin component of hemoproteins, such as hemoglobin and myoglobin, and gives meat its red color. These proteins are digested in the upper gastrointestinal tract, releasing heme in the gut lumen (14). Heme is a pro-oxidant that has been shown previously to increase colonic epithelial proliferation and toxicity of fecal water in rats (15). These effects were specific for heme because equimolar dietary ferric citrate and protoporphyrin did not increase proliferation and cytotoxicity (15). Dietary heme was metabolized in the gut lumen and resulted in the formation of a highly cytotoxic factor that damaged the colonic mucosa (16). This resulted in a compensatory hyperproliferation of the epithelium, which may increase the risk of colon cancer (17). In addition, Pierre et al. (18) showed that red meat and heme increased formation of aberrant crypt foci in rats. A role for heme in colorectal cancer etiology is further supported by Bingham et al. (19, 20). They showed in randomized crossover experiments in a metabolic suite that male volunteers, exposed to high amounts of red meat or heme, produced higher levels of fecal N-nitroso compounds than when exposed to the same amounts of white meat or ferrous iron.
Previous results from the Netherlands Cohort Study on Diet and Cancer (NLCS) indicated that fresh meat consumption as such was not a risk factor for colon cancer (4). However, intake of iron was found to be a risk factor in men (21). Lee et al. (22) reported previously that the relative risks for (proximal) colon cancer increased >2-fold across categories of heme iron intake in the Iowa Women's Health Study, especially among women who drink alcohol. Larsson et al. (23) also observed an increased risk for colon cancer with a high heme iron intake in a female Swedish cohort, but the association was equally likely as that for meat as such. To date, heme intake is usually assessed by applying a fixed factor to the total iron content of all meat items regardless of the origin of the meat. However, it is apparent from the literature that not only the absolute total iron content differs substantially between meat from different origins but also the percentage iron from heme, which is high in beef and low in poultry and fish (24). To assess heme intake more accurately, we took the origin of the meat (beef, pork, chicken, etc.) into account by estimating the heme content of specific types of meat based on published literature.
In addition to a hypothesized positive association between heme intake and colorectal cancer risk, we hypothesized that chlorophyll, the ubiquitous pigment in green vegetables, modifies this association. Chlorophyll is structurally similar to heme, as it contains a porphyrin ring similar to that of heme but with a central, nonreactive magnesium instead of iron atom. Chlorophyll may block the reactivity of heme in the gastrointestinal tract and thus prevent the formation of cytotoxic heme metabolites. We showed previously in rats that addition of spinach or purified chlorophyll to a heme diet inhibited heme metabolism in the gut and prevented the heme-induced formation of a cytotoxic factor that increased colonic cytotoxicity and epithelial proliferation (16).
The aim of this article was to determine the association of heme in combination with chlorophyll intake with risk of colorectal cancer in the NLCS, a population-based prospective cohort study with 9.3 years of follow-up. To our knowledge, this has not previously been studied in an observational setting.
| Subjects and Methods |
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After excluding subjects who reported prevalent cancer other than skin cancer at baseline and subjects with incomplete or inconsistent dietary information, 869 male and 666 female cases with primary colon (International Classification of Diseases for Oncology 153.0-153.9) or rectal cancer (International Classification of Diseases for Oncology 154.0 and 154.1) and 2,156 male and 2,215 female subcohort members were available for analysis.
The NLCS has been approved by the institutional review boards of the TNO Nutrition and Food Research Institute (Zeist) and Maastricht University (Maastricht).
Questionnaire
The dietary part of this questionnaire consisted of a 150-item semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) on the usual intake of food and beverages in the year preceding the start of the study, which was validated against a 9-day diet record (27). The Spearman correlation coefficients for fresh meat, processed meat (meat products), fish, and vegetables were 0.46, 0.54, 0.53, and 0.38 respectively. As the classification of foods into food groups did not entirely overlap, due to differences in the coding of recipes between the FFQ and record, the observed correlation between the food groups was likely to be lower than the true. On average, the FFQ captured between 85% and 98% of the absolute intake of energy, animal protein, and total (fresh) meat assessed by the record but only 57% of processed meat.
Questionnaire data of all cases and subcohort members have been key-entered twice and blinded with respect to case/subcohort status to avoid random and systematic coding errors.
Assessment of Heme Iron Intake
The FFQ contained 14 items on consumption of meat with the hot meal (mainly fresh meat, including chicken), 5 items on consumption of processed meat (meat products) used as sandwich filling, and 3 items on fish consumption. To derive an individual serving size of fresh meat, a question was included on the quantity of meat usually purchased (per person, per meal). For chicken and fish, standard serving sizes were used. Fresh meat was defined as meat that has not undergone some form of preservation and includes beef, pork, minced meat, chicken, liver, and other meat (i.e., horse and lamb). Processed meat was defined as meat items that have undergone some form of preservation [i.e., smoking, fermentation, and/or treatment with nitrate and/or nitrite salt ("curing")]. Meat items in the questionnaire were converted into mean daily consumption in grams.
We decided to use the total iron content of each heme-containing food item from the Dutch Food Composition Database (28), which was used to calculate nutrient intake in the NLCS, as a starting point, as this takes into account the specific types, cuts, and fat composition of the Dutch food items. To investigate the levels of heme for different types of meat, poultry, and fish, a literature search was done. The results were used to derive the mean percentage heme iron relative to total iron for each specific origin of the meat (beef, pork, chicken, fish, etc.). We selected only those studies that measured total iron directly and, after lipid extraction, heme iron in the same meat sample (24, 29-32). The average percentages were 65, 39, and 26 for cooked beef, pork, and chicken or fish, respectively. Multiplying the type-specific percentages of heme iron with the total iron content (mg/g) yielded heme iron contents for all heme-containing food items in the NLCS database. Individual mean daily intake of heme iron was assessed by multiplying the estimated heme iron content with the mean daily intake of the relevant food items.
Assessment of Chlorophyll Intake
With regard to vegetable consumption, participants were asked to report their frequency of consumption of several vegetables both in summer and in winter. Usual serving sizes were asked for string beans and cooked endive only, the mean of which served as an indicator for serving sizes of all cooked vegetables (33). Standard serving sizes were used for lettuce and other raw vegetables. For tomatoes and sweet peppers, consumption was asked in pieces per week and month, respectively, during summer and winter. We used the derived individual portion sizes to convert these frequencies and amounts to consumption in grams per day. Items included in the questionnaire covered almost all vegetables and fruits eaten regularly at baseline measurement.
To assess chlorophyll intake, publications reporting chlorophyll content in vegetables were searched. However, this information seemed to be scarce in published literature. Khachik et al. (34) reported total chlorophyll contents for broccoli, cabbage, spinach, brussels sprouts, and kale. We classified all vegetables from the NLCS FFQ into five categories most resembling these five vegetables analyzed by Khachik et al. Throughout the classification of the vegetables, we also took the level of green coloring, assumed to correlate with chlorophyll content, and the shape of the vegetables into account, as vegetables growing on a head usually have a core that is pale compared with the outer leaves. The five vegetable categories were not green colored (white, yellow, red, etc.) vegetables (0 mg/100 g), pale green vegetables with a light core (leek and broad beans, 2 mg/100 g), green vegetables (brussels sprouts, green cabbage, green beans, and green peppers, 6 mg/100 g), green leafy vegetables (endive, spinach, and lettuce, 130 mg/100 g), and dark green leafy vegetables (kale, 185 mg/100 g).
To check our classification of the vegetables included in our questionnaire but not analyzed by Khachik et al., we also measured the chlorophyll content of some of these vegetables relative to that of spinach, which was used as reference. We extracted chlorophyll from freeze-dried endive, lettuce, tomato, and spinach (bought in a local supermarket) by washing them with 80% acetone until colorless (35). The concentration chlorophyll in the extracts of these vegetables was determined by comparing their absorption spectra with those of standard chlorophyll a and b solutions in 80% acetone (Sigma) on a spectrophotometer (Lambda 2; Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk, CT). Our classification of the vegetables concerned in the five chlorophyll categories was in agreement with their classification based on the chemical analysis. Mean daily intake of chlorophyll was calculated by multiplying the estimated chlorophyll content of the vegetables with their respective intake.
Statistical Analyses
All analyses were conducted separately for men and women. Cox proportional hazards models were constructed to estimate hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) relating intake of heme iron and chlorophyll to the incidence of colorectal, colon, and rectal cancer (Stata version 9, Stata Corp., College Station, TX). The proportional hazards assumption was tested using Schoenfeld residuals. Because of the case-cohort design, the 95% CIs were corrected for the additional variance introduced by using a random sampled subcohort instead of the complete cohort by using the robust option. Rate ratios (RR) for heme iron were estimated for quintiles based on the sex-specific distribution in the subcohort and as a continuous variable with an increment of 1 mg/d. Two-sided tests for trend in the RRs were assessed by fitting ordinal exposure categories as continuous variables. To evaluate whether early symptoms of disease before diagnosis could have influenced the results, early cases (diagnosed within 2 years after baseline) were also excluded from the analyses.
Age at baseline, education, cigarette smoking, nonoccupational physical activity, body mass index (BMI), intake of energy, alcohol, folate, and fiber and total vegetable consumption were considered as potential confounders based on their association with risk of colorectal cancer. Of these, age at baseline (years), cigarette smoking status (never, former, current), nonoccupational physical activity (<30, 30-60, 60-90, >90 min/d), BMI (continuous, kg/m2), alcohol intake (gender-specific categories), and total vegetable consumption (continuous, g/d) were included in the confounder-adjusted models as they were associated with heme intake and seemed to affect the RR estimates. Family history of colorectal cancer in first- or second-degree relatives, a strong determinant of colorectal cancer risk, was added to the multivariate models to reduce residual variation.
To evaluate the combined effect of heme and chlorophyll on the risk of colorectal, colon, and rectal cancer, indicator variables were included in the regression model, representing tertiles of heme iron by tertiles of the intake of chlorophyll, using the lowest tertile of heme and the highest tertile of chlorophyll as the reference category. Total vegetable consumption was analyzed in the same manner. Presence of effect modification (on the multiplicative scale) was tested using the interaction term of the continuous heme and chlorophyll variables. Biological interaction was assessed by comparing the sum of the main effects with the combined effect (36). In addition, risk of colorectal cancer was estimated for quintiles of the molar ratio of heme/chlorophyll. Subjects with a high score on an error index for measurement of vegetable consumption, which was available in the data set (33), were excluded from this analysis to avoid unrealistic high and low ratios.
Colon cancer was also divided in proximal cancer (cecum through transverse colon; International Classification of Diseases for Oncology codes 153.0,153.1, 153.4, 153.5, and 153.6) and distal cancer (splenic flexure through sigmoid colon; International Classification of Diseases for Oncology codes 153.2, 153.3, and 153.7) for the analyses of main effects of heme, chlorophyll, and the heme/chlorophyll ratio.
Modification of the heme-colorectal cancer association by alcohol consumption was assessed by dividing subjects in three (gender-specific) categories of alcohol consumption.
| Results |
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Table 3 presents RRs for chlorophyll intake and for heme-related variables that may alternatively explain the relation between heme intake and colon cancer. The highest compared with the lowest quintile of chlorophyll intake was inversely but not statistically significant associated with risk of colon cancer in men (RR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.57-1.07, Pstrend = 0.08). This association was less consistent in women (Pstrend = 0.46). Whereas among men no association was observed between total iron and fresh meat and colon cancer, a small increased risk was seen for men eating >20 g processed meat/d (RR, 1.33; 95% CI, 0.89-1.99). The association of processed meat with colon cancer attenuated when heme iron intake was included in the model (RR for the highest compared with the lowest quintile of processed meat consumption was 1.23; 95% CI, 0.80-1.89 for men; data not shown).
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| Discussion |
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The prospective design and the completeness of follow-up of our study (>95%; ref. 37) ensured that information bias due to disease status and selection bias due to loss of follow-up are unlikely. In addition, the associations did not seem to be spuriously produced by symptoms of early but not yet diagnosed disease, as the exclusion of cases diagnosed within the first 2 years of follow-up made the associations more evident, indicating that early cases had a somewhat lower heme intake than later cases.
Our study also has some limitations. Measurement error can be substantial in dietary assessment. The validation study of our FFQ has shown that it does relatively well (27), but measurement error will still have attenuated associations. Furthermore, as neither heme nor chlorophyll was included in the Dutch food composition table, the content of these compounds was estimated based on reported levels in the literature. This may have resulted in additional measurement error, although the estimation of heme intake was based on more available data than that of chlorophyll intake. However, although there is a considerable chance of misclassification, it is unlikely that this misclassification would be differential with regard to the end point. In addition, heme iron content values as calculated in this study (i.e., based on type-specific percentage of total iron content) seemed to be in reasonable agreement with absolute heme iron values in meat and fish available from the same literature sources. Finally, although our results for heme support prior biological hypotheses and agree with studies in rats (15) and humans (20), we cannot rule out the possibility of chance findings within small subgroups.
Previously published results on meat and colorectal cancer risk in the NLCS, based on 3.3 years (4) and 7.3 years (21) of follow-up, showed no association between consumption of total fresh meat and fish and colon cancer risk in men and women. A positive association for both men and women was initially observed for processed meat and colon cancer (4) but diminished, particularly in women, after longer follow-up. The current results for fresh meat and colon cancer, based on extended follow-up, are still in line with the previous.
The weak but consistent association between heme intake and colon cancer observed in men was driven by consumption of (cooked) beef, which contains three to four times as much heme as (cooked) pork. The contribution of each type of meat to the total fresh meat consumption was
40%, 42%, 14%, and 4% for beef, pork, chicken, and other meat (including horse and lamb), respectively, in this population. The relative high proportion of pork may explain the absence of an association with fresh meat in our study. Other cohorts have frequently used "red meat," which includes beef, pork, and lamb, as key variable in meat and cancer studies but have only rarely reported on the association between colorectal cancer and specific types of meat also because some frequently used FFQs did not distinguish beef from pork consumption. In North American cohorts, consumption of beef is roughly thrice higher than that of pork. However, recent results from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition showed a stronger association of colorectal cancer risk with pork than with beef plus veal (12).
The RRs for heme and colon cancer became stronger when additional adjustment for fresh and processed meat was done, indicating that a meat effect, if any, is more likely to be due to heme and not to other constituents or preparation methods of meat. Most epidemiologic studies that determined the risk of specific constituents of (red) meat considered only total dietary iron (38). However, as
90% of the total dietary iron consists of non-heme iron, associations of total dietary iron with colorectal cancer in most epidemiologic studies may be attenuated by other compounds contained in the nonmeat sources of this non-heme iron. Two studies examined associations among colon cancer incidence and dietary intake of heme iron among women (22, 23). Both observed an increased risk of colon cancer with increasing heme iron intake; however, this association was confined to proximal colon tumors in the Iowa Women's Health Study (22), whereas the study in Sweden likely observed the association for distal tumors only (11). In both studies, the positive association between heme iron and colon cancer was stronger among women who consumed alcohol than among those who consumed little or no alcohol. Neither study took the type of meat into account in the assessment of heme iron as they applied a fixed percentage (40%) to the total iron content of all meat items. Although we did not observe an association between heme intake and colon cancer among women, we observed a suggestion of an association with colon and rectal cancer among women who drank >5 g alcohol (0-1 glass)/d, which is comparable with the level above which an effect was seen in Iowa and Sweden (22, 23).
We did not beforehand anticipate a different association for men and women. However, there are several plausible explanations for the different findings. An explanation could be the total intake of heme and chlorophyll. Men are known to consume more food in general and more meat and relatively less vegetable than women as was also evident from our data. Alternatively, it could also be hypothesized that, as women need more iron due to menstrual losses and as heme iron is more easily absorbed compared with non-heme iron, relatively more iron from heme is absorbed in women, so that less heme is available during lifetime up to menopause to form the cytotoxic factor in the bowel.
Our results are also consistent with those of experimental studies among human volunteers (19, 20). As these studies were conducted in men only, we do not know whether women would have shown a different effect of red meat and heme.
Evidence of a protective effect of (green) vegetables for colorectal cancer risk (39, 40) stimulated us to investigate the interaction of heme and spinach in an animal model study. We showed that spinach or an equimolar amount of chlorophyll inhibited dietary heme-induced luminal cytotoxicity and damage to colonic mucosa in rats (16). The addition of chlorophyll to a heme diet prevented the formation of a cytotoxic heme metabolite. We speculated that chlorophyll traps heme in hydrophobic heme-chlorophyll complexes in the gut lumen and as a result blocks the pro-oxidant activity of heme (16, 41). This mechanism implies that heme and chlorophyll must be consumed simultaneously. The present study indicates that an increase in risk is indeed associated with an increase in the heme iron to chlorophyll ratio, although the evidence for biological interaction between heme and chlorophyll was not strong. However, our FFQ was not designed to capture combinations of specific types of meat with specific types of vegetables in the same meal, although vegetables are mostly eaten in combination with meat, particularly in this population with traditional dietary habits. We can therefore expect that biological interaction, if present, is underestimated due to dilution effects of the heme and chlorophyll variables calculated as mean daily intake. A human experimental study has not observed inhibition of heme-induced formation of N-nitroso compounds by vegetables, but the vegetables used in that study (broccoli, peas, and brussels sprouts) were low in chlorophyll compared with high levels of heme in the type and quantities of meat used (42). Our rat studies showed only detrimental dietary heme-induced effects in the absence or at low concentrations of chlorophyll.4 Furthermore, processed meats, in contrast to fresh meats, are often not consumed together with vegetables. This might also explain why the association with processed meats and colorectal cancer is clearer than for fresh meats.
In conclusion, we hypothesized that heme might be positively associated with colon cancer risk despite absence of an association with meat and that chlorophyll intake would modify this association. Our results confirm these hypotheses in part, but further research is needed, particularly on the role of chlorophyll and the association in women.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 10/ 7/05; revised 1/ 2/06; accepted 2/ 3/06.
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