Dietary acrylamide and cancer risk: an updated meta-analysis.

International journal of cancer. 2015;136(12):2912-22

Plain language summary

Acrylamide is formed in a variety of foods, and some evidence suggests it may cause cancer. The aim of this study was to update their quantitative meta-analysis on dietary acrylamide intake and cancer risk. The study is a meta-analysis based on systemic-literature focusing on the estimate of total dietary acrylamide. A total of 32 publications were reviewed. Results indicate that there is a lack of association between dietary acrylamide and most cancer sites. However, there is a potential small increase in the risk between high levels of acrylamide intake and kidney, endometrial and ovarian cancer in non-smoking women. Authors conclude that dietary acrylamide is not related to the risk of most common cancers.

Abstract

The debate on the potential carcinogenic effect of dietary acrylamide is open. In consideration of the recent findings from large prospective investigations, we conducted an updated meta-analysis on acrylamide intake and the risk of cancer at several sites. Up to July 2014, we identified 32 publications. We performed meta-analyses to calculate the summary relative risk (RR) of each cancer site for the highest versus lowest level of intake and for an increment of 10 µg/day of dietary acrylamide, through fixed-effects or random-effects models, depending on the heterogeneity test. Fourteen cancer sites could be examined. No meaningful associations were found for most cancers considered. The summary RRs for high versus low acrylamide intake were 0.87 for oral and pharyngeal, 1.14 for esophageal, 1.03 for stomach, 0.94 for colorectal, 0.93 for pancreatic, 1.10 for laryngeal, 0.88 for lung, 0.96 for breast, 1.06 for endometrial, 1.12 for ovarian, 1.00 for prostate, 0.93 for bladder and 1.13 for lymphoid malignancies. The RR was of borderline significance only for kidney cancer (RR = 1.20; 95% confidence interval, CI, 1.00-1.45). All the corresponding continuous estimates ranged between 0.95 and 1.03, and none of them was significant. Among never-smokers, borderline associations with dietary acrylamide emerged for endometrial (RR = 1.23; 95% CI, 1.00-1.51) and ovarian (RR = 1.39; 95% CI, 0.97-2.00) cancers. This systematic review and meta-analysis of epidemiological studies indicates that dietary acrylamide is not related to the risk of most common cancers. A modest association for kidney cancer, and for endometrial and ovarian cancers in never smokers only, cannot be excluded.

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Immune and inflammation
Patient Centred Factors : Triggers/Cancer/dietary acrylamide
Environmental Inputs : Diet ; Nutrients
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Nutrition
Functional Laboratory Testing : Not applicable
Bioactive Substances : Glycidamide

Methodological quality

Allocation concealment : Not applicable

Metadata