Salah Eddine El Herrag

Ph.D. student in Cell Biology and Pathology

Association between carotenoids and prostate cancer risk: A Meta Analysis


Journal article


Hadjer Benkhadda, Manel Bouchentouf, Salah Eddine El Herrag
The North African Journal of Food and Nutrition Research, vol. 3(5), 2019 Feb, pp. 131-139


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Benkhadda, H., Bouchentouf, M., & El Herrag, S. E. (2019). Association between carotenoids and prostate cancer risk: A Meta Analysis. The North African Journal of Food and Nutrition Research, 3(5), 131–139. https://doi.org/10.51745/najfnr.3.5.131-139


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Benkhadda, Hadjer, Manel Bouchentouf, and Salah Eddine El Herrag. “Association between Carotenoids and Prostate Cancer Risk: A Meta Analysis.” The North African Journal of Food and Nutrition Research 3, no. 5 (February 2019): 131–139.


MLA   Click to copy
Benkhadda, Hadjer, et al. “Association between Carotenoids and Prostate Cancer Risk: A Meta Analysis.” The North African Journal of Food and Nutrition Research, vol. 3, no. 5, Feb. 2019, pp. 131–39, doi:10.51745/najfnr.3.5.131-139.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{benkhadda2019a,
  title = {Association between carotenoids and prostate cancer risk: A Meta Analysis},
  year = {2019},
  month = feb,
  issue = {5},
  journal = {The North African Journal of Food and Nutrition Research},
  pages = {131-139},
  volume = {3},
  doi = {10.51745/najfnr.3.5.131-139},
  author = {Benkhadda, Hadjer and Bouchentouf, Manel and El Herrag, Salah Eddine},
  month_numeric = {2}
}

Abstract

Background: Carotenoids have been hypothesized to promote the prevention and treatment of prostate cancer (PC). Aims:  Conducting a meta-analysis to assess whether the association differs by the type of carotenoids and to compare the relationships of each type of carotenoid with PC risk. Methods and Material:  A literature search was conducted using the PubMed database. Pertinent studies were included in the meta-analysis of higher versus lower categories of dietary intakes or serum concentrations of carotenoids in relation to PC. A random-effects model was used to obtain the pooled odds ratios (ORs) and their confidence intervals (95%) of the case-control and cohort studies, for generic inverse variance data. Results: 13 identified studies involved 44,861 participants. The meta-analysis determined, for total carotenoids and lycopene, a statistically significant relationship with PC risk; OR: 0.88; 95% CI 0.81-0.96 and 0.87; 95% CI 0.77-0.99 respectively. However, no other carotenoid was noticed to have a statistically significant association with PC risk. Comparison of the effect of each type of carotenoid on PC risk showed that lycopene, lutein-zeaxanthin, and β-cryptoxanthin had a moderate inverse but not statistically significant relationship with PC risk. Compared to β-carotene, and α-carotene results, their effect estimates were higher than the previous carotenoids. Conclusions:  Our findings indicate that PC was inversely associated with total carotenoids and lycopene dietary intake and serum concentrations. These data provide support for the utilization of carotenoids for the treatment and prevention of PC.
KEYWORDS: Prostate cancer; Carotenoids; Lycopene; β-Carotene; Meta-analysis

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