Wolk A, Larsson SC, Johansson J-E et al. Long-term Fatty Fish Consumption and Renal Cell Carcinoma Incidence in Women. J Am Medical Assoc.,2006;296(11):1371-1376.
Context: The epidemiological evidence that fatty fish consumption may be
associated with the lower risk of several cancers is not consistent
and no studies of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) exist.
Objective: To examine the association between fatty and lean fish consumption
and risk of RCC in women.
Design, Setting, and Participants: The Swedish Mammography Cohort, a population-based prospective cohort study
of 61 433 women aged 40 to 76 years without previous diagnosis of
cancer at baseline (March 1, 1987-December 14, 1990).
Participants filled in a food frequency questionnaire at baseline and
in September 1997.
Main Outcome Measure: Incident renal cell carcinoma.
Results: During a mean of 15.3 years (940 357 person-years) of follow-up between
1987 and 2004, 150 incident RCC cases were diagnosed.
After adjustment for potential confounders, an inverse association
of fatty fish consumption with the risk of RCC was found
(P for trend = .02), but no association was found with lean fish
consumption.
Compared with no consumption, the multivariate rate ratio (RR) was 0.56 (95% confidence interval
[CI], 0.35-0.91) for women eating fatty fish once a week or more.
Compared with women consistently reporting no fish consumption, the multivariate
RR was 0.26 (95% CI, 0.10-0.67) for those women reporting consistent consumption of
fatty fish at baseline and 1997 (based on a subset of 36 664 women who filled in the
baseline and 1997 questionnaires, with 40 incident RCC cases during the 1998-2004 follow-up period).
Conclusion: Our study suggests that consumption of fatty fish may reduce the occurrence of RCC in women.
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