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Journal article

Lifetime total and beverage specific - alcohol intake and prostate cancer risk: a case-control study

Abstract

BackgroundWe investigated lifetime alcohol consumption and prostate cancer risk in a case-control study conducted in Buffalo, NY (1998–2001).MethodsThe study included 88 men, aged 45 to 85 years with incident, histologically-confirmed prostate cancer and 272 controls. We conducted extensive in-person interviews regarding lifetime alcohol consumption and other epidemiologic data.ResultsProstate cancer risk was not associated with lifetime intake of total and beverage specific ethanol. In addition we found no association with number of drinks per day (average drinks per day over the lifetime) or drinks per drinking day (average drinks per day on drinking days only over the lifetime). However, we observed an inverse association with the total number of drinking years. Men in the lowest tertile of total drinking years had a two-fold prostate cancer risk than men in the highest tertile (OR 2.16, 95% CI 0.98–4.78, p for trend <0.05).ConclusionOur results suggest that alcohol intake distribution across lifetime may play a more important role in prostate cancer etiology than total lifetime consumption.

Authors

Barba M; McCann SE; Schünemann HJ; Stranges S; Fuhrman B; De Placido S; Carruba G; Freudenheim JL; Trevisan M; Russell M

Journal

Nutrition Journal, Vol. 3, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 9, 2004

DOI

10.1186/1475-2891-3-23

ISSN

1475-2891

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