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Published in: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment 2/2009

01-07-2009 | Epidemiology

Dietary isoflavone intake and breast cancer risk in case–control studies in Japanese, Japanese Brazilians, and non-Japanese Brazilians

Authors: Motoki Iwasaki, Gerson Shigeaki Hamada, Ines Nobuko Nishimoto, Mario Mourão Netto, Juvenal Motola Jr., Fábio Martins Laginha, Yoshio Kasuga, Shiro Yokoyama, Hiroshi Onuma, Hideki Nishimura, Ritsu Kusama, Minatsu Kobayashi, Junko Ishihara, Seiichiro Yamamoto, Tomoyuki Hanaoka, Shoichiro Tsugane

Published in: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | Issue 2/2009

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Abstract

Although epidemiologic studies have shown an inverse association between isoflavones and breast cancer risk, little evidence for a dose–response relation is available. We conducted hospital-based case–control studies of patients aged 20–74 years with primary, incident, histologically confirmed invasive breast cancer, and matched controls from medical checkup examinees in Nagano, Japan and from cancer-free patients in São Paulo, Brazil. A total of 850 pairs (390 Japanese, 81 Japanese Brazilians and 379 non-Japanese Brazilians) completed validated food frequency questionnaires. The odds ratio of breast cancer according to isoflavone intake was estimated using a conditional logistic regression model. We found a statistically significant inverse association between isoflavone intake and the risk of breast cancer for Japanese Brazilians and non-Japanese Brazilians. For Japanese, a non-significant inverse association was limited to postmenopausal women. In the three populations combined, breast cancer risk linearly decreased from ‘no’ to ‘moderate’ isoflavone intake and thereafter leveled off. Compared to non-consumers, adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence interval) for consumers in increasing quintile intake categories (median intake in each category: 8.7, 23.1, 33.8, 45.7, and 71.3 mg/day) were 0.69 (0.44–1.09), 0.54 (0.31–0.94), 0.45 (0.26–0.77), 0.34 (0.19–0.62), and 0.43 (0.24–0.76), respectively. Overall, we found an inverse association between dietary isoflavone intake and risk of breast cancer. Our finding suggests a risk-reducing rather than risk-enhancing effect of isoflavones on breast cancer within the range achievable from dietary intake alone. In addition, women may benefit from risk reduction if they consume at least moderate amounts of isoflavones.
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Metadata
Title
Dietary isoflavone intake and breast cancer risk in case–control studies in Japanese, Japanese Brazilians, and non-Japanese Brazilians
Authors
Motoki Iwasaki
Gerson Shigeaki Hamada
Ines Nobuko Nishimoto
Mario Mourão Netto
Juvenal Motola Jr.
Fábio Martins Laginha
Yoshio Kasuga
Shiro Yokoyama
Hiroshi Onuma
Hideki Nishimura
Ritsu Kusama
Minatsu Kobayashi
Junko Ishihara
Seiichiro Yamamoto
Tomoyuki Hanaoka
Shoichiro Tsugane
Publication date
01-07-2009
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment / Issue 2/2009
Print ISSN: 0167-6806
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7217
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-008-0168-1

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