Esophageal Cancer
Copyright ©2006 Baishideng Publishing Group Co., Limited. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Jul 21, 2006; 12(27): 4296-4303
Published online Jul 21, 2006. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v12.i27.4296
Nitrosamine and related food intake and gastric and oesophageal cancer risk: A systematic review of the epidemiological evidence
Paula Jakszyn, Carlos Alberto González
Paula Jakszyn, Carlos Alberto González, Unit of Nutrition, Environment and Cancer, Department of Epidemiology and Cancer Registry. Institut Català d´ Oncologia, (ICO- IDIBELL), L´Hospitalet de Llobregat (08907), Barcelona, Spain
Supported by a fellowship of the ‘Fundació Privada Institut D’investigacio Biomédica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL) and partially funded by the ISCIII network (RCESP C03/09) Spain and ECNIS Network from the 6FP of the EC
Correspondence to: Paula Jakszyn, MPH Department of Epidemiology and Cancer Registry (ICO-IDIBELL), Catalan Institute of Oncology. Av.Gran Via km. 2,7 s/n (08907) L´Hospitalet de LLobregrat, Barcelona, Spain. paujak@ico.scs.es
Telephone: +34-93-2607401 Fax: +34-93-2607787
Received: July 18, 2005
Revised: July 28, 2005
Accepted: December 25, 2005
Published online: July 21, 2006
Abstract

AIM: To study the association between nitrite and nitrosamine intake and gastric cancer (GC), between meat and processed meat intake, GC and oesophageal cancer (OC), and between preserved fish, vegetable and smoked food intake and GC.

METHODS: In this article we reviewed all the published cohort and case-control studies from 1985-2005, and analyzed the relationship between nitrosamine and nitrite intake and the most important related food intake (meat and processed meat, preserved vegetables and fish, smoked foods and beer drinking) and GC or OC risk. Sixty-one studies, 11 cohorts and 50 case-control studies were included.

RESULTS: Evidence from case-control studies supported an association between nitrite and nitrosamine intake with GC but evidence was insufficient in relation to OC. A high proportion of case-control studies found a positive association with meat intake for both tumours (11 of 16 studies on GC and 11 of 18 studies on OC). A relatively large number of case-control studies showed quite consistent results supporting a positive association between processed meat intake and GC and OC risk (10 of 14 studies on GC and 8 of 9 studies on OC). Almost all the case-control studies found a positive and significant association between preserved fish, vegetable and smoked food intake and GC. The evidence regarding OC was more limited. Overall the evidence from cohort studies was insufficient or more inconsistent than that from case-control studies.

CONCLUSION: The available evidence supports a positive association between nitrite and nitrosamine intake and GC, between meat and processed meat intake and GC and OC, and between preserved fish, vegetable and smoked food intake and GC, but is not conclusive.

Keywords: Nitrites; N-nitrosodimethylamine; Nitroso-compounds; Dietary intake; Gastric cancer