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Experimental Biology and Medicine 227:860-863 (2002)
© 2002 Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine


SYMPOSIA

Tomatoes, Lycopene Intake, and Digestive Tract and Female Hormone-Related Neoplasms

Carlo La Vecchia1,

Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, 20157 Milano, Italy; and Istituto di Statistica Medica e Biometria, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20133 Milano, Italy

Tomato consumption showed a consistent inverse relation with the risk of digestive tract neoplasms in Italy in an integrated series of studies conducted in the 1980s. Another series of case-control studies was conducted between 1992 and 1999 in different areas of Italy. Cases were patients below age 80 with incident, histologically confirmed cancer of the oral cavity and pharynx (n = 754), esophagus (n = 304), colorectum (n = 1953), breast (n = 2529), and ovary (n = 1031). The comparison group involved, overall, over 5000 patients below age 80 with acute, non-neoplastic, nonhormone-related diseases, unrelated to long-term diet modifications and admitted to the same network of hospitals. Information was collected in hospital by trained interviewers using a validated food frequency questionnaire, including 78 foods or groups of foods, various alcoholic beverage, and fat-intake pattern. The multivariate relative risk (RR) of oral, pharyngeal, and esophageal cancer decreased across subsequent levels of lycopene intake to reach 0.7 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.4–1.0) for oral and pharyngeal, and 0.7 (95% CI 0.4-1.1) for esophageal cancer in the highest quintile of intake. Both trends in risk were of borderline statistical significance. With reference to colorectal, breast, and ovarian cancer, although no consistent association was observed for lycopene (RR = 1.0 for colorectal, 1.2 for breast, and 1.1 for ovary in the highest quintile), tomato intake was inversely and significantly related with colorectal cancer (RR = 0.8). The inverse relation between lycopene and upper digestive tract neoplasms was not explained by alcohol or tobacco, sociodemographic factors, or total energy intake. The interpretation of such an inverse relation, however, remains open to discussion because it may be related to an effect of lycopene due to its antioxidant effect and/or a potential role of lycopene in decreasing insulin growth factor I, which is a promoter in the process of carcinogenesis.

Key Words: vegetables • fruit • micronutrients • neoplasms • human




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