View : 523 Download: 0

Alcohol consumption and serum metabolite concentrations in young women

Title
Alcohol consumption and serum metabolite concentrations in young women
Authors
Dorgan, Joanne F.Jung, SeungyounDallal, Cher M.Zhan, MinStennett, Christina A.Zhang, YujiEckert, Richard L.Snetselaar, Linda G.Van Horn, Linda
Ewha Authors
정승연
SCOPUS Author ID
정승연scopus
Issue Date
2020
Journal Title
CANCER CAUSES & CONTROL
ISSN
0957-5243JCR Link

1573-7225JCR Link
Citation
CANCER CAUSES & CONTROL vol. 31, no. 2, pp. 113 - 126
Keywords
AlcoholSerum metaboliteAndrogenSarcosineEicosapentaenoate
Publisher
SPRINGER
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Purpose Alcohol consumption is an established breast cancer risk factor, though further research is needed to advance our understanding of the mechanism underlying the association. We used global metabolomics profiling to identify serum metabolites and metabolic pathways that could potentially mediate the alcohol-breast cancer association. Methods A cross-sectional analysis of reported alcohol consumption and serum metabolite concentrations was conducted among 211 healthy women 25-29 years old who participated in the Dietary Intervention Study in Children 2006 Follow-Up Study (DISC06). Alcohol-metabolite associations were evaluated using multivariable linear mixed-effects regression. Results Alcohol was significantly (FDR p < 0.05) associated with several serum metabolites after adjustment for diet composition and other potential confounders. The amino acid sarcosine, the omega-3 fatty acid eicosapentaenoate, and the steroid 4-androsten-3beta,17beta-diol monosulfate were positively associated with alcohol intake, while the gamma-tocopherol metabolite gamma-carboxyethyl hydroxychroman (CEHC) was inversely associated. Positive associations of alcohol with 2-methylcitrate and 4-androsten-3beta,17beta-diol disulfate were borderline significant (FDR p < 0.10). Metabolite set enrichment analysis identified steroids and the glycine pathway as having more members associated with alcohol consumption than expected by chance. Conclusions Most of the metabolites associated with alcohol in the current analysis participate in pathways hypothesized to mediate the alcohol-breast cancer association including hormonal, one-carbon metabolism, and oxidative stress pathways, but they could also affect risk via alternative pathways. Independent replication of alcohol-metabolite associations and prospective evaluation of confirmed associations with breast cancer risk are needed.
DOI
10.1007/s10552-019-01256-1
Appears in Collections:
신산업융합대학 > 식품영양학과 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE