Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype

Ecological studies and results from our low-fat, high-carbohydrate dietary intervention trial suggest that different carbohydrates are associated with breast cancer risk in different ways. We examined the association of diet glycemic index (GI), a ranking of carbohydrate containing foods based on t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Greenberg, Carolyn
Other Authors: Martin, Lisa
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25604
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-256042013-04-20T05:21:42ZGlycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and PhenotypeGreenberg, Carolynglycemic indexbreast cancer0570Ecological studies and results from our low-fat, high-carbohydrate dietary intervention trial suggest that different carbohydrates are associated with breast cancer risk in different ways. We examined the association of diet glycemic index (GI), a ranking of carbohydrate containing foods based on their blood glucose raising potential, with breast cancer risk and phenotype. GI was calculated from multiple food records from subjects in our intervention trial using a nested case-control design (220 cases, 440 controls). GI was not associated with risk of total or estrogen receptor positive breast cancer, tumor size or nodal status. GI was strongly positively associated with hormone negative breast cancer. This finding is potentially important as little is known about the etiology of hormone negative breast cancer, which has a worse prognosis than hormone positive breast cancer. However, this finding is based on a small number of cases and should be replicated in a larger sample.Martin, Lisa2010-112010-12-31T21:28:34ZNO_RESTRICTION2010-12-31T21:28:34Z2010-12-31T21:28:34ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/25604en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic glycemic index
breast cancer
0570
spellingShingle glycemic index
breast cancer
0570
Greenberg, Carolyn
Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype
description Ecological studies and results from our low-fat, high-carbohydrate dietary intervention trial suggest that different carbohydrates are associated with breast cancer risk in different ways. We examined the association of diet glycemic index (GI), a ranking of carbohydrate containing foods based on their blood glucose raising potential, with breast cancer risk and phenotype. GI was calculated from multiple food records from subjects in our intervention trial using a nested case-control design (220 cases, 440 controls). GI was not associated with risk of total or estrogen receptor positive breast cancer, tumor size or nodal status. GI was strongly positively associated with hormone negative breast cancer. This finding is potentially important as little is known about the etiology of hormone negative breast cancer, which has a worse prognosis than hormone positive breast cancer. However, this finding is based on a small number of cases and should be replicated in a larger sample.
author2 Martin, Lisa
author_facet Martin, Lisa
Greenberg, Carolyn
author Greenberg, Carolyn
author_sort Greenberg, Carolyn
title Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype
title_short Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype
title_full Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype
title_fullStr Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype
title_full_unstemmed Glycemic Index and Breast Cancer Risk and Phenotype
title_sort glycemic index and breast cancer risk and phenotype
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25604
work_keys_str_mv AT greenbergcarolyn glycemicindexandbreastcancerriskandphenotype
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