Diet, obesity, lifestyle and cancer prevention: epidemiologic perspectives
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Transcript of Diet, obesity, lifestyle and cancer prevention: epidemiologic perspectives
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Diet, obesity, lifestyle and cancer prevention:
Epidemiologic perspectivesGraham A Colditz, MD DrPH
Niess-Gain ProfessorChief, Division of Public Health Sciences
November, 2017
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
OutlineReview evidence on contribution of diet, obesity, lifestyle and in particualr, increasing burden of obesity on cancerIdentify:
IssuesGaps in knowledgeOpportunities
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Lifestyle: high income countriesCause
% cancer caused
Magnitude possible
reductionTime (yrs)
Smoking 33Overweight/obesity 20Diet 5Lack of exercise 5Occupation 5Viruses 5-7Family history 5Alcohol 3UV/ionizing radiation 2
Reproductive 3Pollution 2 Colditz et al, Sci Transl Med 2012
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Lifestyle: high income countriesCause
% cancer caused
Magnitude possible
reductionTime (yrs)
Smoking 33 75%Overweight/obesity 20 50%Diet 5 50%Lack of exercise 5 85%Occupation 5 50%Viruses 5-7 100%Family history 5 50%Alcohol 3 50%UV/ionizing radiation 2 50%
Reproductive 3 0Pollution 2 0
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Lifestyle: high income countriesCause
% cancer caused
Magnitude possible
reductionTime (yrs)
Smoking 33 75% 10-20Overweight/obesity 20 50% 2-20Diet 5 50% 5-20Lack of exercise 5 85% 5-20Occupation 5 50% 20-40Viruses 5-7 100% 20-40Family history 5 50% 2-10Alcohol 3 50% 5-20UV/ionizing radiation 2 50% 2-10
Reproductive 3 0 N/APollution 2 0 N/A
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Time course: lung & total mortalityCurrent smoker:continuing
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Medical interventions proven to prevent cancer: high-income
InterventionTarget Magnitude of
reduction Time (yrs)
Aspirin Colon mortality 40% 20+SERMs Breast incidence 40-50% 5+Salpingooophorectomy Familial breast cancer 50% 3+
Screening for colorectal cancer Colon cancer mortality 30-40% 10
Viruses - HPV Cervical cancer incidence 50-100% 20+- Hep B Liver cancer incidence 70-100% 20+
Mammography Breast cancer mortality 30% 10-20Serial CT lung Lung cancer mortality 20% 6+
Colditz et al, Sci Transl Med 2012
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Histologically confirmed cervical abnormalities, Vic, Australia
CIN2, CIN3
Brotherton et al MJA 2016
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Pancreatic cancer
Yachida Nature 2010; Luebeck EG. Nature 2010
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Summary of evidence: Adolescent exposures relation to risk of BBD and breast cancer
Lifestyle Relative Risk BBD Breast Cancer (premenopausal)
Alcohol
Peak Growth Velocity
Height
Nuts
Fiber
Carotenoids Fruit and veggies
Vegetable protein
Family history
Physical activityColditz Bohlke Berkey Br Ca Res Treat 2015, Colditz & Bohlke 2014
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Alcohol intake, ages 18-22, incident proliferative BBD
Alcohol intake(grams/day)
Cases
(678)
Person-year
RR (95% CI)
None 155 64,827 1.0 reference0.1-4.9 193 78,365 1.11 (0.89, 1.38)5.0-14.9 236 88,310 1.36 (1.09, 1.69)>15 30 9519 1.35 (1.01, 1.81)
p, trend <0.01
Liu et al. – Pediatrics, 2012
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Alcohol before first pregnancy, NHSII
Liu, Colditz, Tamimi JNCI 2013
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Adolescent fiber & proliferative BBD: NHSII
Su et al. Cancer Causes Control 2010
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Are we there yet?
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Obesity and cancer, time line -• 1990s WHO, US Dietary Guidelines, adopt
common cut points• 2002 IARC report• 2008 et seq WCRF report• 2016 update of IARC report
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
IARC 2002 and Calle 2003• Review of evidence on weight obesity and
physical activity in relation to cancer• Calle: ACS cohort published after the
IARC review panel
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
IARC 2002“Sufficient evidence in humans for cancer-preventive effect of avoidance of weight gain for cancers of the colon, esophagus (adenocarcinoma), kidney (renal cell), breast (postmenopausal), and corpus uteri”
Translate: Obesity causes cancerIACR Handbooks of Cancer Prevention Vol 6, 2002
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Review of Evidence, IARC 2002Obesity
LevelofEvidence
RiskIncreaseAssociatedwithObesity
Small
(RR1.09-1.34)Moderate
(RR1.35-1.99)Large
(RR2.0-4.9)VeryLarge(RR5.0+)
Convincing Colon Breast Esophagus Uterus Kidney Probable
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Calle et al 2003
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Workgroup reviewed measures of adiposity; animal models; mechanisms; and epidemiologic evidence.Concluded lack of body fatness lowers risk, or obesity causes cancer.
NEJM August 25, 2016
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Evidence evolvingFrom only a couple of prospective cohorts in 2002, adding ACS mortality in 2003• Now evidence from 30 to 50 or more
prospective cohorts • Pooled analysis of individual participant
data from studies addressing BMI and less common cancers
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Why prospective studies and pooled data• Measure adiposity and risk of subsequent
cancer• Avoid weight change due to disease
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Individual participant data –pooled analysisIPD meta-analyses can improve the quality of data and the type of analyses that can be done and produce more reliable results (Stewart and Tierney 2002). For this reason they are considered to be a ‘gold standard’ of systematic review. In fact, IPD meta-analyses have produced definitive answers to clinical questions, which might not have been obtained from summary data.
Cochrane Handbook Ch 18 and IPD methods
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
GI• Gastric cardia• Liver• Pancreas• Gall bladder
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
PancreasMore than 20 prospective studies and case-control studies indicating a positive dose-response relation. Observed in the large majority of studies and in both genders. Compared to normal weigh, the RR for overweight was 1.18 (1.03-1.36) and for obesity 1.47 (1.23-1.75), estimated from pooled analysis of 14 cohorts [Genkinger 2011].
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Genkinhger et al 2011
2135 casesDuring 846,340 py
Forest plot of RR for BMI >30 vs 21-22.9
Baseline BMI
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
BMI in early adulthood
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Relative risk of ovarian cancer by BMI and HT use
Collaborative Group on Epidemiological Studies of Ovarian Cancer (2012) Ovarian Cancer and Body Size: Individual Participant Meta-Analysis Including 25,157 Women with Ovarian Cancer from 47 Epidemiological Studies. PLoS Med 9(4): e1001200. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001200http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001200
Never use HT
Ever use
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Evidence, 2016
RiskIncreaseAssociatedwithObesity LevelofEvidence
Small(RR1.09-1.34)
Moderate(RR1.35-1.99)
Large(RR2.0-4.9)
VeryLarge(RR5.0+)
Convincing Ovary Colon Breast Esophagus Thyroid Gastriccardia
LiverKidney Uterus
Gallbladder Pancreas
MeningiomaMultiplemyeloma
Probable Malebreast
Fatalprost.DiffuseLargeB-celllymphoma
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Time course obesity
Increase in childhood adiposity
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Pancreatic cancer US incidence 1992 to
2014
Age 20 to 49
Rising incidence 0.9% per year (significant)
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Colorectal cancer US incidence 1992 to
2014
Age 20 to 49
Rising incidence 1.7% per year (significant)
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Childhood and early adult adiposity• Often consistent with adult adiposity and
risk• Analysis not always clear
• Methods, correlated variables, and interpretation
• Challenges in breast cancer• Inverse relation with adiposity at ages 5, 10, before menarche• Weight gain increases risk• How does childhood adiposity reduce risk for life?
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
0 10 18 30 47 Age (years)
Premenopausal Postmenopausal
50
+kg
Post-menopausal Breast Cancer Risk
-1 0.80 0.98
1.36 (weight change from 18 to attained)
Adiposity
1.37 (weight change after menopausal to attained)
Reference: Rosner, B., Eliassen, A. H., Toriola, A. T., Chen, W. Y., Hankinson, S. E., Willett, W. C., ... & Colditz, G. A. (2017). Weight and weight changes in early adulthood and later breast cancer risk. International journal of cancer, 140(9), 2003-2014.
+kg+kg
Age (years)
-1
Pre-menopausal Breast Cancer Risk
0.66 0.741.0
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
0 10 18 30 47 Age (years)
Premenopausal Postmenopausal
50
+kg
Post-menopausal Breast Cancer Risk
-1 0.80 0.98
1.36 1.36 (weight change from 18 to attained)
Adiposity
1.37 (weight change after menopausal to attained)
Reference: Rosner, B., Eliassen, A. H., Toriola, A. T., Chen, W. Y., Hankinson, S. E., Willett, W. C., ... & Colditz, G. A. (2017). Weight and weight changes in early adulthood and later breast cancer risk. International journal of cancer, 140(9), 2003-2014.
+kg+kg
Age (years)
-1
Pre-menopausal Breast Cancer Risk 0.66 0.74 1.0
ER-/PR-Breast Cancer RiskRR / 30kg
0.73 (0.55-0.98)
0.70(0.46-1.05) Weight change unrelated to risk
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Top priorities to advance the science –obesity and cancerImproved (consistent) approaches to modeling weight gain across life course and cancer riskQuantify benefits of weight lossMeasures of adiposity• Do we have it right, do measures vary by
age; race/ethnicity; region of the world
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Top priorities to advance the science – diet, lifestyle and cancerImproved (consistent) approaches to modeling exposure in time course of cancer developmentMeasures of diet lifestyle in childhood adolescence • Can biomarkers in blood banks replace
recall of childhood adolescent exposures?
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Behavioral, Social, and Policy interventions that impact Cancer PreventionIntervention Target Type of Ix Evidence
review
Reduce tobacco use
Children and Adolescents
Smokers to quit
Combined Pharmaco/behavioral IxsSmoke-free policiesTobacco taxes
Surgeon General
Increase physical activity
Individuals and community norms
Urban designStairs and workplace
Surgeon General
Reduce Obesity Population School & work environmentPhysical activityFood & beverage
IOM report 2012
Limit alcohol intake Population Taxes WHO
Reduce UV exp Children, AYA All of above WHO
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Department of SurgeryDivision of Public Health Sciences
Wall-eCaptain
Will we all have access to driverless cars?
What will our cancer risk be?