Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Current studies give us inconsistent results regarding the association of neoplasms and zinc(II) serum and tissues concentrations. The results of to-date studies using meta-analysis are summarized in this paper. METHODS: Web of Science (Science citation index expanded), Pu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jaromir Gumulec, Michal Masarik, Vojtech Adam, Tomas Eckschlager, Ivo Provaznik, Rene Kizek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4062461?pdf=render
id doaj-5c72f8634f8b414288df00a7e9832447
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5c72f8634f8b414288df00a7e98324472020-11-24T21:44:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0196e9979010.1371/journal.pone.0099790Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.Jaromir GumulecMichal MasarikVojtech AdamTomas EckschlagerIvo ProvaznikRene KizekBACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Current studies give us inconsistent results regarding the association of neoplasms and zinc(II) serum and tissues concentrations. The results of to-date studies using meta-analysis are summarized in this paper. METHODS: Web of Science (Science citation index expanded), PubMed (Medline), Embase and CENTRAL were searched. Articles were reviewed by two evaluators; quality was assessed by Newcastle-Ottawa scale; meta-analysis was performed including meta-regression and publication bias analysis. RESULTS: Analysis was performed on 114 case control, cohort and cross-sectional studies of 22737 participants. Decreased serum zinc level was found in patients with lung (effect size = -1.04), head and neck (effect size = -1.43), breast (effect size = -0.93), liver (effect size = -2.29), stomach (effect size = -1.59), and prostate (effect size = -1.36) cancers; elevation was not proven in any tumor. More specific zinc patterns are evident at tissue level, showing increase in breast cancer tissue (effect size = 1.80) and decrease in prostatic (effect size = -3.90), liver (effect size = -8.26), lung (effect size = -3.12), and thyroid cancer (effect size = -2.84). The rest of the included tumors brought ambiguous results, both in serum and tissue zinc levels across the studies. The association between zinc level and stage or grade of tumor has not been revealed by meta-regression. CONCLUSION: This study provides evidence on cancer-specific tissue zinc level alteration. Although serum zinc decrease was associated with most tumors mentioned herein, further--prospective--studies are needed.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4062461?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jaromir Gumulec
Michal Masarik
Vojtech Adam
Tomas Eckschlager
Ivo Provaznik
Rene Kizek
spellingShingle Jaromir Gumulec
Michal Masarik
Vojtech Adam
Tomas Eckschlager
Ivo Provaznik
Rene Kizek
Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jaromir Gumulec
Michal Masarik
Vojtech Adam
Tomas Eckschlager
Ivo Provaznik
Rene Kizek
author_sort Jaromir Gumulec
title Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
title_short Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
title_full Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
title_fullStr Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
title_sort serum and tissue zinc in epithelial malignancies: a meta-analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Current studies give us inconsistent results regarding the association of neoplasms and zinc(II) serum and tissues concentrations. The results of to-date studies using meta-analysis are summarized in this paper. METHODS: Web of Science (Science citation index expanded), PubMed (Medline), Embase and CENTRAL were searched. Articles were reviewed by two evaluators; quality was assessed by Newcastle-Ottawa scale; meta-analysis was performed including meta-regression and publication bias analysis. RESULTS: Analysis was performed on 114 case control, cohort and cross-sectional studies of 22737 participants. Decreased serum zinc level was found in patients with lung (effect size = -1.04), head and neck (effect size = -1.43), breast (effect size = -0.93), liver (effect size = -2.29), stomach (effect size = -1.59), and prostate (effect size = -1.36) cancers; elevation was not proven in any tumor. More specific zinc patterns are evident at tissue level, showing increase in breast cancer tissue (effect size = 1.80) and decrease in prostatic (effect size = -3.90), liver (effect size = -8.26), lung (effect size = -3.12), and thyroid cancer (effect size = -2.84). The rest of the included tumors brought ambiguous results, both in serum and tissue zinc levels across the studies. The association between zinc level and stage or grade of tumor has not been revealed by meta-regression. CONCLUSION: This study provides evidence on cancer-specific tissue zinc level alteration. Although serum zinc decrease was associated with most tumors mentioned herein, further--prospective--studies are needed.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4062461?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT jaromirgumulec serumandtissuezincinepithelialmalignanciesametaanalysis
AT michalmasarik serumandtissuezincinepithelialmalignanciesametaanalysis
AT vojtechadam serumandtissuezincinepithelialmalignanciesametaanalysis
AT tomaseckschlager serumandtissuezincinepithelialmalignanciesametaanalysis
AT ivoprovaznik serumandtissuezincinepithelialmalignanciesametaanalysis
AT renekizek serumandtissuezincinepithelialmalignanciesametaanalysis
_version_ 1725909476505026560