2015
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7342
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Fat, fibre and cancer risk in African Americans and rural Africans

Abstract: Rates of colon cancer are much higher in African Americans (65:100,000) than in rural South Africans (<5:100,000). The higher rates are associated with higher animal protein and fat and lower fiber consumption, higher colonic secondary bile acids, lower colonic short chain fatty acid quantities and higher mucosal proliferative biomarkers of cancer risk in otherwise healthy middle aged volunteers. Here we investigate further the role of fat and fiber in this association. We performed two-week food exchanges in … Show more

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Cited by 775 publications
(701 citation statements)
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“…47 A recent 2-week food exchange study between NA and AA (NA consumed animal-based diet, AA consumed vegetarian-based diet) demonstrate rapid reciprocal changes in levels of bacteria responsible for sulfide production (B. wadsworthia, Desulfovibrio spp) and protective butyrate production, as well as levels of DCA producing bacteria (C. scindens) and DCA in stool. 48 These results confirm a recent short-term diet exchange focusing on animal-and plant-based diets which found enhanced DCA formation and increased levels of taurine-utilizing, sulfide-producing B. wadsworthia. 47 AA were dominated by Bacteroides while NA by Prevotella consistent with the study by David et al (2013).…”
Section: ¡supporting
confidence: 88%
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“…47 A recent 2-week food exchange study between NA and AA (NA consumed animal-based diet, AA consumed vegetarian-based diet) demonstrate rapid reciprocal changes in levels of bacteria responsible for sulfide production (B. wadsworthia, Desulfovibrio spp) and protective butyrate production, as well as levels of DCA producing bacteria (C. scindens) and DCA in stool. 48 These results confirm a recent short-term diet exchange focusing on animal-and plant-based diets which found enhanced DCA formation and increased levels of taurine-utilizing, sulfide-producing B. wadsworthia. 47 AA were dominated by Bacteroides while NA by Prevotella consistent with the study by David et al (2013).…”
Section: ¡supporting
confidence: 88%
“…39 Evidence is emerging that as animal-based diets stimulate more bile input into the gut the levels of DCA-producing bacteria increase. 47,48 LCA is also produced from the 7a-dehydroxylation of CDCA or the 7b-dehydroxylation of UDCA and is highly toxic (potentially genotoxic and tumor-promoting). However, LCA does not tend to accumulate in the bile acid pool because it is efficiently excreted in feces by 2 mechanisms: 1) Being monohydroxylated, it is insoluble in fecal water and efficiently precipitates out in the acidic pH of the colon particularly in the presence of Ca 2C ions; and 2) binding of LCA to VDR results in enzymatic sulfation of LCA 49 whose hydrophilicity prevents passive absorption in colonocytes and allows removal from the body.…”
Section: Production Of Deoxycholic Acidmentioning
confidence: 99%
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