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Plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D and colorectal cancer risk according to tumour immunity status

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2016

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BMJ Publishing Group
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Song, Mingyang, Reiko Nishihara, Molin Wang, Andrew T Chan, Zhi Rong Qian, Kentaro Inamura, Xuehong Zhang, et al. 2015. “Plasma 25-Hydroxyvitamin D and Colorectal Cancer Risk according to Tumour Immunity Status.” Gut 65 (2): 296–304. https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2014-308852.

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Abstract

Objective Evidence suggests protective effects of vitamin D and antitumour immunity on colorectal cancer risk. Immune cells in tumour microenvironment can convert 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] to bioactive 1 alpha, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3, which influences neoplastic and immune cells as an autocrine and paracrine factor. Thus, we hypothesised that the inverse association between vitamin D and colorectal cancer risk might be stronger for cancers with high-level immune response than those with low-level immune response. Design: We designed a nested case-control study (318 rectal and colon carcinoma cases and 624 matched controls) within the Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study using molecular pathological epidemiology database. Multivariable conditional logistic regression was used to assess the association of plasma 25 (OH) D with tumour subtypes according to the degree of lymphocytic reaction, tumour-infiltrating T cells (CD3+, CD8+, CD45RO+ (PTPRC) and FOXP3+ cells), microsatellite instability or CpG island methylator phenotype. Results: The association of plasma 25(OH)D with colorectal carcinoma differed by the degree of intratumoural periglandular reaction (p for heterogeneity=0.001); high 25(OH)D was associated with lower risk of tumour with high-level reaction (comparing the highest versus lowest tertile: OR 0.10; 95% CI 0.03 to 0.35; p for trend<0.001), but not risk of tumour with lower-level reaction (p for trend>0.50). A statistically non-significant difference was observed for the associations of 25(OH)D with tumour subtypes according to CD3+ T cell density (p for heterogeneity= 0.03; adjusted statistical significance level of alpha=0.006). Conclusions: High plasma 25(OH)D level is associated with lower risk of colorectal cancer with intense immune reaction, supporting a role of vitamin D in cancer immunoprevention through tumour-host interaction.

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