Frontiers in Nutrition (May 2022)

Association Between Dietary Fatty Acid Pattern and Risk of Oral Cancer

  • Yi Fan,
  • Yi Fan,
  • Yu Qiu,
  • Jing Wang,
  • Jing Wang,
  • Qing Chen,
  • Qing Chen,
  • Sijie Wang,
  • Sijie Wang,
  • Yaping Wang,
  • Yaping Wang,
  • Yanni Li,
  • Yanni Li,
  • Yanfeng Weng,
  • Yanfeng Weng,
  • Jiawen Qian,
  • Jiawen Qian,
  • Fa Chen,
  • Fa Chen,
  • Jing Wang,
  • Bin Shi,
  • Lizhen Pan,
  • Lisong Lin,
  • Baochang He,
  • Baochang He,
  • Fengqiong Liu,
  • Fengqiong Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.864098
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo investigate the association between dietary fatty acid (FA) patterns and the risk of oral cancer.MethodA case-control study which included 446 patients with oral cancer and 448 controls subjects was conducted in Southeast China. A structured food frequency questionnaire was used to assess the dietary FA consumption before cancer diagnosis. FA patterns were identified using the principal component analysis, and the relationship between the dietary FA patterns and oral cancer was analyzed by logistic regression.ResultsGeneral differences in FA intake were observed between the patient and control groups. The intakes of saturated FAs (SFAs) C14:0, C16:0, C18:0, and monounsaturated FA C18:1 were higher in the patient group than the control group (p < 0.001). Four FA patterns were derived by principal component analysis. The “SFA” pattern, “Polyunsaturated FA” pattern, “Monounsaturated FA” pattern, and “Medium- and long-chain FA” pattern, which could explain 75.7% of the variance of the dietary FA intake, were submitted to logistic regression analysis. A positive association was observed between the “SFA” pattern and oral cancer risk. Compared with the lowest quartile score, the OR of the highest quartile score was 3.71 (95%CI: 2.31, 5.94, Ptrend < 0.001) in the multivariate logistic regression model. No significant association was found among the other three patterns and oral cancer risk.ConclusionsGeneral differences in dietary FA intake were observed between patients with oral cancer and controls. A positive association between the “SFA” pattern and risk of oral cancer was observed after adjusting for potential confounders.

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