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Dietary Inflammatory and Insulinemic Potentials, Plasma Metabolome and Risk of Colorectal Cancer

Authors :
Dong Hoon Lee
Qi Jin
Ni Shi
Fenglei Wang
Alaina M. Bever
Jun Li
Liming Liang
Frank B. Hu
Mingyang Song
Oana A. Zeleznik
Xuehong Zhang
Amit Joshi
Kana Wu
Justin Y. Jeon
Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt
Andrew T. Chan
A. Heather Eliassen
Clary B. Clish
Steven K. Clinton
Edward L. Giovannucci
Fred K. Tabung
Source :
Metabolites, Vol 13, Iss 6, p 744 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

The inflammatory and insulinemic potentials of diets have been associated with colorectal cancer risk. However, it is unknown whether the plasma metabolite profiles related to inflammatory diets, or to insulinemic diets, underlie this association. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between metabolomic profile scores related to the food-based empirical dietary inflammatory patterns (EDIP), the empirical dietary index for hyperinsulinemia (EDIH), and plasma inflammation (CRP, IL-6, TNFα-R2, adiponectin) and insulin (C-peptide) biomarkers, and colorectal cancer risk. Elastic net regression was used to derive three metabolomic profile scores for each dietary pattern among 6840 participants from the Nurses’ Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study, and associations with CRC risk were examined using multivariable-adjusted logistic regression, in a case-control study of 524 matched pairs nested in both cohorts. Among 186 known metabolites, 27 were significantly associated with both the EDIP and inflammatory biomarkers, and 21 were significantly associated with both the EDIH and C-peptide. In men, odds ratios (ORs) of colorectal cancer, per 1 standard deviation (SD) increment in metabolomic score, were 1.91 (1.31–2.78) for the common EDIP and inflammatory-biomarker metabolome, 1.12 (0.78–1.60) for EDIP-only metabolome, and 1.65 (1.16–2.36) for the inflammatory-biomarkers-only metabolome. However, no association was found for EDIH-only, C-peptide-only, and the common metabolomic signatures in men. Moreover, the metabolomic signatures were not associated with colorectal cancer risk among women. Metabolomic profiles reflecting pro-inflammatory diets and inflammation biomarkers were associated with colorectal cancer risk in men, while no association was found in women. Larger studies are needed to confirm our findings.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22181989
Volume :
13
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Metabolites
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.34123ceeec9e45459a6aadec9c90b2c0
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo13060744