Selenium in Forage Crops and Cancer Mortality in U.S. Counties
- 1 February 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Archives of environmental health
- Vol. 46 (1) , 37-42
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00039896.1991.9937427
Abstract
The potential protective effect of selenium status on the risk of developing cancer has been examined in animal and epidemiologic studies. This ecological study investigated the association between U.S. county forage selenium status and site- and sex-specific county cancer mortality rates (1950–1969) using weighted least squares regression. Consistent, significant (p < .01) inverse associations were observed for cancers of the lung, rectum, bladder, esophagus, and cervix in a model limited to rural counties and for cancers of the lung, breast, rectum, bladder, esophagus, and corpus uteri in a model of all counties. No consistent significant positive associations were observed in the rural county models. This remarkable degree of consistency for the inverse associations strengthens the likelihood of a causal relationship between low selenium status and an increased risk of cancer mortality.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Can Dietary Selenium Modify Cancer Risk?Nutrition Reviews, 2009
- Gastrointestinal cancer. Its geographic distribution and correlation to breast cancerCancer, 2006
- IS SERUM SELENIUM A RISK FACTOR FOR CANCER IN MEN ONLY?1American Journal of Epidemiology, 1987
- Proposed Supplemental Dosages of Selenium for a Phase I Trial Based on Dietary and Supplemental Selenium Intakes and Episodes of Chronic SelenosisJournal of the American College of Toxicology, 1986
- Selenium Compounds and the Prevention of Cancer: Research Needs and Public Health ImplicationsJournal of Nutrition, 1986
- Dietary selenium in humans toenails as an indicatorBiological Trace Element Research, 1983
- The distribution of selenium and cancer mortality in the continental United StatesBiological Trace Element Research, 1983
- Geographic variation in esophageal cancer mortality in the United StatesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1977
- Selenium, Molybdenum, and Vanadium in Human BloodArchives of environmental health, 1968
- Selenium in crops in the United States in relation to selenium-responsive diseases of animalsJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1967