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International differences in body height and weight and their relationship to cancer incidence

 

作者: AlbanesDemetrius,   TaylorPhilipR.,  

 

期刊: Nutrition and Cancer  (Taylor Available online 1990)
卷期: Volume 14, issue 1  

页码: 69-77

 

ISSN:0163-5581

 

年代: 1990

 

DOI:10.1080/01635589009514078

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis Group

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

AbstractThe relationship between body size (adult height and weight) and cancer incidence was investigated in an international ecological study of 24 populations. Site‐specific and total cancer incidence rates (age standardized) from 1973 to 1977 were correlated with body size data generally obtained between 1954 and 1974. All‐sites cancer incidence was highly correlated with height among both men (r = 0.50; p≤0.01) and women (r = 0.70; p≤0.001). Among men, there were significant correlations between height and cancers of the central nervous system (r = 0.72), prostate (r = 0.66), bladder (r = 0.65), pancreas (r = 0.59), lung (r = 0.47), and colon (r = 0.46). Significant correlations were observed for cancers of the rectum (r = 0.76), pancreas (r = 0.75), ovary (r = 0.73), central nervous system (r = 0.68), breast (r = 0.65), uterine corpus (r = 0.50), and bladder (r = 0.48) in women. Adjustment for weight altered these correlations only minimally. Weight was significantly correlated to all‐sites cancer only among women (r = 0.44; p<0.05), and site‐specific correlations were significant for the same sites as for height, but the magnitude of the correlation coefficients was somewhat diminished. In addition, adjustment for height greatly reduced the correlations with weight. These findings support previously observed associations between height and specific cancers (e.g., breast and colon) and identify several additional cancer sites that may be similarly related.

 

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