Fruit, vegetables, and cancer prevention: A review of the epidemiological evidence
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Nutrition and Cancer
- Vol. 18 (1) , 1-29
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01635589209514201
Abstract
Approximately 200 studies that examined the relationship between fruit and vegetable intake and cancers of the lung, colon, breast, cervix, esophagus, oral cavity, stomach, bladder, pancreas, and ovary are reviewed. A statistically significant protective effect of fruit and vegetable consumption was found in 128 of 156 dietary studies in which results were expressed in terms of relative risk. For most cancer sites, persons with low fruit and vegetable intake (at least the lower one‐fourth of the population) experience about twice the risk of cancer compared with those with high intake, even after control for potentially confounding factors. For lung cancer, significant protection was found in 24 of 25 studies after control for smoking in most instances. Fruits, in particular, were significantly protective in cancers of the esophagus, oral cavity, and larynx, for which 28 of 29 studies were significant. Strong evidence of a protective effect of fruit and vegetable consumption was seen in cancers of the pancreas and stomach (26 of 30 studies), as well as in colorectal and bladder cancers (23 of 38 studies). For cancers of the cervix, ovary, and endometrium, a significant protective effect was shown in 11 of 13 studies, and for breast cancer a protective effect was found to be strong and consistent in a meta analysis. It would appear that major public health benefits could be achieved by substantially increasing consumption of these foods.Keywords
This publication has 178 references indexed in Scilit:
- Role of diet in upper aerodigestive tract cancersNutrition and Cancer, 1987
- Vitamin A and other dietary factors in the etiology of esophageal cancerNutrition and Cancer, 1987
- The role of diet in prostate cancerNutrition and Cancer, 1987
- Dietary vitamin A and lung cancer: Results of a case‐control study among chemical workersNutrition and Cancer, 1987
- Diet and esophageal cancer in calvados (France)Nutrition and Cancer, 1987
- Case‐control study of dietary etiological factors: The Melbourne colorectal cancer studyNutrition and Cancer, 1987
- The nutritional causes of colorectal cancer: An introduction to the melbourne studyNutrition and Cancer, 1987
- Serum Beta-Carotene, Vitamins a and E, Selenium, and the Risk of Lung CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Dietary vitamin a and cancer—a Multisite case‐control studyNutrition and Cancer, 1986
- Relation of Serum Vitamins a and E and Carotenoids to the Risk of CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984