Login / Signup

Consumption of industrial processed foods and risk of premenopausal breast cancer among Latin American women: the PRECAMA study.

Isabelle RomieuNeha KhandpurAikaterini KatsikariCarine BiessyGabriela Torres-MejíaAngélica Ángeles-LlerenasIsabel Alvarado-CabreroGloria Inés SánchezMaria Elena MaldonadoCarolina PorrasAna Cecilia RodriguezMaria Luisa GarmendiaVèronique ChajésElom K AglagoPeggy L PorterMingGang LinMathilde HisMarc J GunterInge HuybrechtsSabina Rinaldinull null
Published in: BMJ nutrition, prevention & health (2022)
Ultra-processed food intake has been linked to an increased risk of breast cancer in Western populations. No data are available in the Latin American population although the consumption of ultra-processed foods is increasing rapidly in this region. We evaluated the association of ultra-processed food intake to breast cancer risk in a case-control study including 525 cases (women aged 20-45 years) and 525 matched population-based controls from Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica and Mexico. The degree of processing of foods was classified according to the NOVA classification. Overall, the major contributors to ultra-processed food intake were ready-to-eat/heat foods (18.2%), cakes and desserts (16.7%), carbonated and industrial fruit juice beverages (16.7%), breakfast cereals (12.9%), sausages and reconstituted meat products (12.1%), industrial bread (6.1%), dairy products and derivatives (7.6%) and package savoury snacks (6.1%). Ultra-processed food intake was positively associated with the risk of breast cancer in adjusted models (OR T3-T1 =1.93; 95% CI=1.11 to 3.35). Specifically, a higher risk was observed with oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer (OR T3-T1 =2.44, (95% CI=1.01 to 5.90, P-trend=0.049), while no significant association was observed with oestrogen receptor negative breast cancer (OR T3-T1 =1.87, 95% CI=0.43 to 8.13, P-trend=0.36). Our findings suggest that the consumption of ultra-processed foods might increase the risk of breast cancer in young women in Latin America. Further studies should confirm these findings and disentangle specific mechanisms relating ultra-processed food intake and carcinogenic processes in the breast.
Keyphrases