Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 1177: Phosphorus Intake and Cancer Risk: A Theoretical–Conceptual Model and Hypothesis for Population-Study Replication

Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 1177: Phosphorus Intake and Cancer Risk: A Theoretical–Conceptual Model and Hypothesis for Population-Study Replication

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18081177

Authors:
Ronald B. Brown

Recent findings in nutritional epidemiology report an association between high dietary phosphorus intake and increased cancer risk. Building on the author’s analysis of breast cancer incidence in the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), this paper presents a theoretical–conceptual model and a hypothesis to guide further population-study replication. To strengthen the initial SWAN analysis signal, a sensitivity analysis increased the number of controls in the nested case–control design from four to five per case. This adjustment modestly raised the relative risk (RR) of breast cancer incidence among middle-aged women consuming >1800 mg/day of dietary phosphorus (compared with 800–1000 mg/day) from RR: 2.30 to 2.38 (95% CI: 0.95–5.95; p = 0.06), improving statistical precision from the original p = 0.07. However, the result remains an exploratory pilot signal, not a confirmed association. Because clinical trials cannot ethically expose participants to potential harm from phosphate toxicity, a confirmed association relies on observational research. As in historical tobacco–cancer investigations, secondary analyses are needed across large cohort studies to examine dietary phosphorus intake and incidence of major cancer types. Relevant cohorts include the Nurses’ Health Study, Women’s Health Initiative, Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) Epidemiologic Follow-Up Study, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC), and the Canadian Study of Diet, Lifestyle and Health. Effect estimates can be synthesized using meta-analytic methods following PRISMA-P 2015 guidelines. Dietary phosphate modification may offer a cancer prevention strategy with substantial public health impact and clinical implications.

​Recent findings in nutritional epidemiology report an association between high dietary phosphorus intake and increased cancer risk. Building on the author’s analysis of breast cancer incidence in the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), this paper presents a theoretical–conceptual model and a hypothesis to guide further population-study replication. To strengthen the initial SWAN analysis signal, a sensitivity analysis increased the number of controls in the nested case–control design from four to five per case. This adjustment modestly raised the relative risk (RR) of breast cancer incidence among middle-aged women consuming >1800 mg/day of dietary phosphorus (compared with 800–1000 mg/day) from RR: 2.30 to 2.38 (95% CI: 0.95–5.95; p = 0.06), improving statistical precision from the original p = 0.07. However, the result remains an exploratory pilot signal, not a confirmed association. Because clinical trials cannot ethically expose participants to potential harm from phosphate toxicity, a confirmed association relies on observational research. As in historical tobacco–cancer investigations, secondary analyses are needed across large cohort studies to examine dietary phosphorus intake and incidence of major cancer types. Relevant cohorts include the Nurses’ Health Study, Women’s Health Initiative, Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) Epidemiologic Follow-Up Study, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC), and the Canadian Study of Diet, Lifestyle and Health. Effect estimates can be synthesized using meta-analytic methods following PRISMA-P 2015 guidelines. Dietary phosphate modification may offer a cancer prevention strategy with substantial public health impact and clinical implications. Read More

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