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PRO-INFLAMMATORY DIET AND RISK OF COLORECTAL AND BLADDER CANCER: EPIDEMIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE


Article Information

Title: PRO-INFLAMMATORY DIET AND RISK OF COLORECTAL AND BLADDER CANCER: EPIDEMIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE

Authors: Syed Muhammad Salman, Muhammad Atif Alam, Haseena Kausar, Kamil Khan

Journal: Journal of Medical & Health Sciences Review

HEC Recognition History
Category From To
Y 2024-10-01 2025-12-31

Publisher: Insightful Education Research Institute

Country: Pakistan

Year: 2025

Volume: 2

Issue: 3

Language: en

DOI: 10.62019/cdv1t191

Keywords: Colorectal cancerUrinary bladder cancerPro-inflammatory DietDietary Inflammatory Index (DII)

Categories

Abstract

Introduction:Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most prevalent cancer worldwide, and urinary bladder cancer (BC) ranks as the tenth most common. Chronic inflammation has been recognized as a significant contributor to cancer development. Diets rich in red and processed meats, sugars, refined grains, and saturated fats—collectively referred to as pro-inflammatory diets—are known to promote systemic inflammation, which may influence cancer risk.
Methodology:This review aims to explore the association between pro-inflammatory diets and the risk of CRC and BC using dietary inflammatory scores: the Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII) and the Empirical Dietary Inflammatory Index (EDII). A systematic search was conducted in PubMed up to October 2022. Human epidemiological studies that employed DII or EDII scores and reported effect estimates (OR, HR, or RR with 95% CI) for CRC or BC were included. A total of 19 studies met the inclusion criteria.
Results:Ten case-control and four cohort studies assessed the link between pro-inflammatory diets and CRC, all reporting a positive association. For BC, two case-control studies demonstrated a positive link, while three cohort studies did not find a statistically significant relationship.
Conclusion:There is consistent evidence supporting a strong positive association between pro-inflammatory diets and increased CRC risk. However, findings related to BC are inconclusive, with conflicting results between study types. Further large-scale prospective studies and pragmatic clinical trials are needed, particularly to better understand the dietary impact on BC risk and to confirm causality in CRC.


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