Posted by Chantel Martiromo. research contributed by PubMed
Ina systematically searched published literature written in English via
PubMed by searching for terms related to stomach and colorectal cancer
risk and dietary flavonoids up to June 30, 2012. Twenty-three studies
out of 209 identified articles were finally selected for the analysis, posted in PubMed, showed that otal dietary flavonoid intake was not associated with a reduced risk of
colorectal or stomach cancer [odds ratio (OR) (95%CI) = 1.00 (0.90-1.11)
and 1.07 (0.70-1.61), respectively]. Among flavonoid subclasses, the
intake of flavonols, flavan-3-ols, anthocyanidins, and proanthocyanidins
showed a significant inverse association with colorectal cancer risk
[OR (95%CI) = 0.71 (0.63-0.81), 0.88 (0.79-0.97), 0.68 (0.56-0.82), and
0.72 (0.61-0.85), respectively]. A significant association was found
only between flavonols and stomach cancer risk based on a limited number
of selected studies [OR (95%CI) = 0.68 (0.46-0.99)]. In the summary
estimates from case-control studies, all flavonoid subclasses except
flavones and flavanones were inversely associated with colorectal cancer
risk, whereas neither total flavonoids nor any subclasses of flavonoids
were associated with colorectal cancer risk in the summary estimates
based on the cohort studies. The significant association between
flavonoid subclasses and cancer risk might be closely related to bias
derived from the case-control design. There was no clear evidence that
dietary flavonoids are associated with reduced risk of stomach and
colorectal cancer.
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