2011
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.26157
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Serum enterolactone and postmenopausal breast cancer risk by estrogen, progesterone and herceptin 2 receptor status

Abstract: Lignans are a group of estrogenic compounds present in plants. Several epidemiological studies proposed that lignans may protect against breast cancer by exerting anticarcinogenic activity. Levels of enterolactone were determined in serum samples of 1,250 cases and 2,164 controls from a large population-based case-control study. We assessed the association between serum enterolactone and postmenopausal breast cancer risk using conditional logistic regression accounting for potential risk and confounding factor… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…The median enterolactone level measured in our study is in accordance with the range of previously published circulating enterolactone concentrations in the US and Europe [49,29,50,36,37,30,51,52,28,53,54,33,55], but lower than that in Asia [56]. We did not observe an association between plasma enterolactone, a biomarker of lignan intake, and breast cancer risk either overall or by hormone receptor status.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…The median enterolactone level measured in our study is in accordance with the range of previously published circulating enterolactone concentrations in the US and Europe [49,29,50,36,37,30,51,52,28,53,54,33,55], but lower than that in Asia [56]. We did not observe an association between plasma enterolactone, a biomarker of lignan intake, and breast cancer risk either overall or by hormone receptor status.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Inconsistent results regarding the enterolactone-breast cancer association have been observed between retrospective studies and prospective studies, with case-control studies generally observing inverse association [26–28,31–34,41,3538,29,30,39,40]. It is possible that breast cancer or its treatment could result in altered circulating enterolactone levels (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Epidemiological and pharmacological studies reveal that END and its oxidation product ENL, in particular, afford protection against osteoporosis, cardiovascular diseases, hyperlipidemia, breast cancer, colon cancer, prostate cancer and menopausal syndrome (Adlercreutz, 2007;Feng, Shi, & Ye, 2008;Adolphe, Whiting, Juurlink, Thorpe & Alcom, 2010;Ayella et al, 2010;Zaineddin et al (2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 43%
“…Similarly, lignan exposure has been inconsistently associated with postmenopausal breast cancer risk, both in studies based on lignan intake assessment (125, 132) and in studies based on lignan biomarkers (125, 137). The limited knowledge of the dietary precursors of mammalian lignans (114) makes the comparison between both types of studies difficult and suggests that current food-composition tables for the few lignans often present in trace amounts in foods are insufficient to assess exposure to mammalian lignans.…”
Section: Measurement Of Polyphenol Exposure In Observational Epidemiomentioning
confidence: 99%