Abstract
We interviewed 282 histologically confirmed cases of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) in Chinese residents of Selangor and the Federal Territory, Malaysia, and an equal number of Chinese age-, sex-, and length-of-residence- matched controls sampled from the general population. Consumption of 55 dietary items during childhood, and 5 years pre-diagnosis of NPC, was analyzed by univariate and multivariate methods. Four salted preserved foods (fish, leafy vegetables, egg and root), fresh pork/beef organ meats and beer and liquor consumption exhibited strong positive associations, and 4 vegetable/fruit combinations strong negative associations with NPC. Factor analysis and multivariable modeling using estimated factor scores strongly supported separate effects on NPC of vegetables/fruits, salted preserved foods, pork/beef organ meats and beer/liquor consumption. Multivariable modeling associated NPC most clearly with high consumption of salted fish, salted eggs, pork/beef liver and beer and low consumption of Chinese flowering cabbage, oranges/tangerines and shrimp. A strong residual association of social class with NPC remained after adjustment for diet, which is consistent with a substantial role for non-dietary environmental factors.
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CITATION STYLE
Armstrong, R. W., Imrey, P. B., Lye, M. S., Jocelyn Armstrong, M., Yu, M. C., & Sani, S. (1998). Nasopharyngeal carcinoma in malaysian chinese: Salted fish and other dietary exposures. International Journal of Cancer, 77(2), 228–235. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0215(19980717)77:2<228::AID-IJC11>3.0.CO;2-7
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