Enter a sentence, or cut and paste a paragraph

Refine

Refine

Refine to these subject areas:

  • Select All | Select None

Advanced Filters »

Refine

  • Advanced Filters:

  • to
  • Specific Data Sources:

    All Edit

    Select All  |  Select None

Reset filters

Bookmark

High intakes of choline and betaine reduce breast cancer mortality in a population-based study

To view this document, you will need to have Adobe Flash Player 10 or above installed.
Please click here to install.

Choline and betaine provide methyl groups for one-carbon metabolism. Humans obtain these nutrients from a wide range of foods. Betaine can also be synthesized endogenously from its precursor, choline. Although animal studies have implied a causal relationship between choline deficiency and carcinogenesis, the role of these two nutrients in human carcinogenesis and tumor progression is not well understood. We investigated the associations of dietary intakes of choline and betaine and breast cancer risk and mortality in the population-based Long Island Breast Cancer Study Project. Among the 1508 case-group women, 308 (20.2%) deaths occurred, among whom 164 (53.2%) died of breast cancer by December 31, 2005. There was an indication that a higher intake of free choline was associated with reduced risk of breast cancer ( P trend =0.04). Higher intakes of betaine, phosphocholine, and free choline were associated with reduced all-cause as well as breast cancer-specific mortality in a dose-dependent fashion. We also explored associations of polymorphisms of three key choline- and betaine-metabolizing genes and breast cancer mortality. The betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase gene ( BHMT ) rs3733890 polymorphism was associated with reduced breast cancer-specific mortality (hazard ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.42–0.97). Our study supports the important roles of choline and betaine in breast carcinogenesis. It suggests that high intake of these nutrients may be a promising strategy to prevent the development of breast cancer and to reduce its mortality.—Xu, X., Gammon, M. D., Zeisal, S. H., Bradshaw, P. T., Wetmur, J. G., Teitelbaum, S. L., Neugut, A. I., Santella, R. M., Chen, J. High intakes of choline and betaine reduce breast cancer mortality in a population-based study.

To view this document, you will need to have Adobe Flash Player 10 or above installed.
Please click here to install.

This is a preview. The total pages displayed will be limited.

Rent for $0.99 FREE

Login

It seems like you have an account, please login to rent this article

Forgot your password?

Don't have an account yet? Sign up now!

To view the full-text of this article, sign up for a free DeepDyve account below.

A free Basic account also comes with
3 free rentals to help get you started.

It seems like you have an account, please login to rent this article

Just 30 seconds to go! Please check your inbox for a confirmation email to activate your account, then start using your 3 FREE rentals.

Learn more Existing user? Login here

Article Details
More Info

More Like This Article

View All dataSource[]=aspet&dataSource[]=aacc&dataSource[]=aacr&dataSource[]=aip&dataSource[]=ajnr&dataSource[]=appi_book&dataSource[]=appi_journal&dataSource[]=asip&dataSource[]=asm&dataSource[]=asn&dataSource[]=aspb&dataSource[]=annual_reviews&dataSource[]=arxiv&dataSource[]=acm&dataSource[]=clinical_trials&dataSource[]=dailymed&dataSource[]=degruyter&dataSource[]=elsevier&dataSource[]=emerald&dataSource[]=emea&dataSource[]=epo&dataSource[]=faseb&dataSource[]=gsa&dataSource[]=health_affairs&dataSource[]=hindawi&dataSource[]=imedpub&dataSource[]=iucr&dataSource[]=iospress&dataSource[]=jbjs&dataSource[]=mesharpe&dataSource[]=mary_ann_liebert&dataSource[]=medline&dataSource[]=mit_press&dataSource[]=oxford&dataSource[]=pnas&dataSource[]=psyc_articles&dataSource[]=psyc_books&dataSource[]=psyc_critiques&dataSource[]=plos_journal&dataSource[]=pubmed_central&dataSource[]=rsna&dataSource[]=rockefeller&dataSource[]=sage&dataSource[]=spie&dataSource[]=springer&dataSource[]=taylor_francis&dataSource[]=aps&dataSource[]=the_scientist&dataSource[]=uc_press&dataSource[]=uspto_abstract&dataSource[]=pct

Browse: Subject Areas | Journals | Publishers

Bookmark an Article

To bookmark an article, please log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don't already have one.

OK

Subscribe to Journal Email Alerts

To subscribe to email alerts, please log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don't already have one.

OK