Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies

We examined dietary fiber intake for its relevance to Colorectal cancer (CRC) survival in a cohort of CRC patients and a meta-analysis including results from four prospective cohort studies. We analyzed 504 CRC patients enrolled in the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Study (NFCCS) who were n...

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Published in:Cancers
Main Authors: Jing Zhao, Yun Zhu, Meizhi Du, Yu Wang, Jillian Vallis, Patrick S. Parfrey, John R. Mclaughlin, Xiuying Qi, Peizhong Peter Wang
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153801
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author Jing Zhao
Yun Zhu
Meizhi Du
Yu Wang
Jillian Vallis
Patrick S. Parfrey
John R. Mclaughlin
Xiuying Qi
Peizhong Peter Wang
author_facet Jing Zhao
Yun Zhu
Meizhi Du
Yu Wang
Jillian Vallis
Patrick S. Parfrey
John R. Mclaughlin
Xiuying Qi
Peizhong Peter Wang
author_sort Jing Zhao
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 15
container_start_page 3801
container_title Cancers
container_volume 14
description We examined dietary fiber intake for its relevance to Colorectal cancer (CRC) survival in a cohort of CRC patients and a meta-analysis including results from four prospective cohort studies. We analyzed 504 CRC patients enrolled in the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Study (NFCCS) who were newly diagnosed with CRC between 1999 and 2003. Follow-up for deaths was through April 2010. All participants completed a self-administered food frequency questionnaire to evaluate their dietary intakes one year before diagnosis. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard models were used to explore the associations of dietary fiber intake with all-cause mortality and CRC-specific mortality. In the meta-analysis, we identified prospective cohort studies published between January 1991 and December 2021 by searching PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library. Fixed-effects or random-effects models were used to combine the study-specific hazard ratio (HR) from our original analysis and three other cohorts. In the NFCCS, we found that CRC patients with the second quartile of dietary fiber intake had a 42% lower risk of all-cause mortality (HR: 0.58, 95% CI: 0.35–0.98) and 58% lower risk of CRC-specific mortality (HR: 0.42, 95% CI: 0.21–0.87) compared with those with the lowest quartile. In the meta-analysis, a similar inverse association between dietary fiber and total mortality was detected among CRC patients; each 10 g/day increase in dietary fiber intake was associated with a 16% decreased risk of total mortality. The dose–response meta-analysis showed a linear relationship between dietary fiber intake and all-cause mortality, with no sign of a plateau. For CRC-specific mortality, intriguingly, the benefit associated with increasing dietary fiber intake achieved its maximum at approximately 22 g/day, and no further reduction in CRC-specific mortality was observed beyond this intake level. Our results suggest that high dietary fiber intake may be associated with prolonged survival among CRC patients. Our findings add to the sparse ...
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2072-6694/14/15/3801/ 2025-01-16T23:24:25+00:00 Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies Jing Zhao Yun Zhu Meizhi Du Yu Wang Jillian Vallis Patrick S. Parfrey John R. Mclaughlin Xiuying Qi Peizhong Peter Wang 2022-08-04 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153801 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Transplant Oncology and Cancer Nursing Care https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153801 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Cancers; Volume 14; Issue 15; Pages: 3801 colorectal cancer dietary fiber intake all-cause mortality CRC-specific mortality Text 2022 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153801 2023-08-01T05:58:03Z We examined dietary fiber intake for its relevance to Colorectal cancer (CRC) survival in a cohort of CRC patients and a meta-analysis including results from four prospective cohort studies. We analyzed 504 CRC patients enrolled in the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Study (NFCCS) who were newly diagnosed with CRC between 1999 and 2003. Follow-up for deaths was through April 2010. All participants completed a self-administered food frequency questionnaire to evaluate their dietary intakes one year before diagnosis. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard models were used to explore the associations of dietary fiber intake with all-cause mortality and CRC-specific mortality. In the meta-analysis, we identified prospective cohort studies published between January 1991 and December 2021 by searching PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library. Fixed-effects or random-effects models were used to combine the study-specific hazard ratio (HR) from our original analysis and three other cohorts. In the NFCCS, we found that CRC patients with the second quartile of dietary fiber intake had a 42% lower risk of all-cause mortality (HR: 0.58, 95% CI: 0.35–0.98) and 58% lower risk of CRC-specific mortality (HR: 0.42, 95% CI: 0.21–0.87) compared with those with the lowest quartile. In the meta-analysis, a similar inverse association between dietary fiber and total mortality was detected among CRC patients; each 10 g/day increase in dietary fiber intake was associated with a 16% decreased risk of total mortality. The dose–response meta-analysis showed a linear relationship between dietary fiber intake and all-cause mortality, with no sign of a plateau. For CRC-specific mortality, intriguingly, the benefit associated with increasing dietary fiber intake achieved its maximum at approximately 22 g/day, and no further reduction in CRC-specific mortality was observed beyond this intake level. Our results suggest that high dietary fiber intake may be associated with prolonged survival among CRC patients. Our findings add to the sparse ... Text Newfoundland MDPI Open Access Publishing Cancers 14 15 3801
spellingShingle colorectal cancer
dietary fiber intake
all-cause mortality
CRC-specific mortality
Jing Zhao
Yun Zhu
Meizhi Du
Yu Wang
Jillian Vallis
Patrick S. Parfrey
John R. Mclaughlin
Xiuying Qi
Peizhong Peter Wang
Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies
title Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies
title_full Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies
title_fullStr Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies
title_full_unstemmed Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies
title_short Association between Dietary Fiber Intake and Mortality among Colorectal Cancer Survivors: Results from the Newfoundland Familial Colorectal Cancer Cohort Study and a Meta-Analysis of Prospective Studies
title_sort association between dietary fiber intake and mortality among colorectal cancer survivors: results from the newfoundland familial colorectal cancer cohort study and a meta-analysis of prospective studies
topic colorectal cancer
dietary fiber intake
all-cause mortality
CRC-specific mortality
topic_facet colorectal cancer
dietary fiber intake
all-cause mortality
CRC-specific mortality
url https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14153801