B-vitamin intake from diet and supplements and breast cancer risk in middle-aged women: Results from the prospective NutriNet-Santé cohort

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Egnell, Manon | Fassier, Philippine | Lécuyer, Lucie | Zelek, Laurent | Vasson, Marie-Paule | Hercberg, Serge | Latino Martel, Paule | Galan, Pilar | Deschasaux, Mélanie | Touvier, Mathilde

Edité par CCSD ; American Association for Cancer Research -

Experimental studies suggest a protective effect of B-vitamins on breast cancer risk, potentially modulated by alcohol intake. However, epidemiological studies are limited, especially regarding non-folate B-vitamins. Furthermore, few of them included quantitative assessment of supplemental intake. This prospective study aimed at investigating the associations between intakes of B-vitamins (dietary, supplemental, total) and breast cancer risk. 27,853 women aged ≥45y from the NutriNet-Santé cohort (2009-2016) were included, with a median follow-up time of 4.2 years. Dietary data were collected using repeated 24h records. A specific questionnaire assessed dietary supplement use over a 12-month period. A composition database of 8000 supplements was developed. Associations were characterized by multivariable Cox models. 462 incident breast cancers were diagnosed. Dietary (HRQ4vs.Q1=0.74(0.55,0.99), P-trend=0.05), supplemental (HRQ4vs.Q1=0.61(0.38,0.98), P-trend=0.05) and total (HRQ4vs.Q1=0.67(0.50,0.91), P-trend=0.01) pyridoxine intakes were inversely associated with breast cancer risk. Total thiamin intake was borderline inversely associated with breast cancer risk (HRper 1-unit increment=0.78(0.61,1.00), P=0.05). Statistically significant interactions between alcohol consumption and B-vitamin (thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, pantothenic acid, pyridoxine, folate, and cobalamin) supplemental intake were observed, the latter being inversely associated with breast cancer risk in non-to-low alcohol drinkers but not in higher drinkers. This large prospective study, including quantitative assessment of supplemental intake, suggests a potential protective effect of pyridoxine and thiamin on breast cancer risk in middle-aged women.

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