A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model
Background: A recent meta-analysis compared the relative risks of colorectal cancer between the highest and lowest levels of coffee consumption in the Japanese population. However, this analysis did not define the risks with respect to specific exposure values when considering levels of coffee consu...
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Japan Epidemiological Association
2018-12-01
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doaj-f777303b4400487da44a9bf88da36cca2020-11-24T23:01:14ZengJapan Epidemiological AssociationJournal of Epidemiology0917-50401349-90922018-12-01281250350910.2188/jea.JE20170201A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline ModelKen Horisaki0Kunihiko Takahashi1Hidemi Ito2Shigeyuki Matsui3Department of Biostatistics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, JapanDepartment of Biostatistics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, JapanDivision of Molecular and Clinical Epidemiology, Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute, Nagoya, JapanDepartment of Biostatistics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, JapanBackground: A recent meta-analysis compared the relative risks of colorectal cancer between the highest and lowest levels of coffee consumption in the Japanese population. However, this analysis did not define the risks with respect to specific exposure values when considering levels of coffee consumption per day in the study population. Methods: We conducted a two-stage random-effects dose-response meta-analysis of the association between coffee consumption and colorectal cancer among the Japanese. This was performed by modeling coffee consumption using restricted cubic splines to be able to examine a potential nonlinear relation. Results: We identified a total of 26 studies from seven articles, which were distributed separately according to sex and colon/rectum cancers. Data from 14 cohort studies showed that the pooled relative risks for colorectal cancers were less than 1.0 in cases with coffee consumption of 1–3 cups/day and 1.0 in cases with consumption of 4 cups/day or more, although these results were not statistically significant. Data from 12 case-control studies showed that the pooled odds ratios for cancer risk were significantly less than 1.0 in cases with coffee consumption of 1–6 cups/day. Conclusions: Findings from this meta-analysis indicate that moderate coffee consumption may not be associated or may be weakly inversely associated with the risk of colorectal cancer in the Japanese population.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jea/28/12/28_JE20170201/_pdfmeta-analysisdose-responsecoffee consumptioncolorectal cancercubic spline model |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ken Horisaki Kunihiko Takahashi Hidemi Ito Shigeyuki Matsui |
spellingShingle |
Ken Horisaki Kunihiko Takahashi Hidemi Ito Shigeyuki Matsui A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model Journal of Epidemiology meta-analysis dose-response coffee consumption colorectal cancer cubic spline model |
author_facet |
Ken Horisaki Kunihiko Takahashi Hidemi Ito Shigeyuki Matsui |
author_sort |
Ken Horisaki |
title |
A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model |
title_short |
A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model |
title_full |
A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model |
title_fullStr |
A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of Coffee Consumption and Colorectal Cancer Risk in the Japanese Population: Application of a Cubic-Spline Model |
title_sort |
dose-response meta-analysis of coffee consumption and colorectal cancer risk in the japanese population: application of a cubic-spline model |
publisher |
Japan Epidemiological Association |
series |
Journal of Epidemiology |
issn |
0917-5040 1349-9092 |
publishDate |
2018-12-01 |
description |
Background: A recent meta-analysis compared the relative risks of colorectal cancer between the highest and lowest levels of coffee consumption in the Japanese population. However, this analysis did not define the risks with respect to specific exposure values when considering levels of coffee consumption per day in the study population. Methods: We conducted a two-stage random-effects dose-response meta-analysis of the association between coffee consumption and colorectal cancer among the Japanese. This was performed by modeling coffee consumption using restricted cubic splines to be able to examine a potential nonlinear relation. Results: We identified a total of 26 studies from seven articles, which were distributed separately according to sex and colon/rectum cancers. Data from 14 cohort studies showed that the pooled relative risks for colorectal cancers were less than 1.0 in cases with coffee consumption of 1–3 cups/day and 1.0 in cases with consumption of 4 cups/day or more, although these results were not statistically significant. Data from 12 case-control studies showed that the pooled odds ratios for cancer risk were significantly less than 1.0 in cases with coffee consumption of 1–6 cups/day. Conclusions: Findings from this meta-analysis indicate that moderate coffee consumption may not be associated or may be weakly inversely associated with the risk of colorectal cancer in the Japanese population. |
topic |
meta-analysis dose-response coffee consumption colorectal cancer cubic spline model |
url |
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jea/28/12/28_JE20170201/_pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
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