Emmanuelle Kesse
Institut Gustave Roussy
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The Lancet | 2003
Sheila Bingham; Nicholas E. Day; Robert Luben; Pietro Ferrari; Nadia Slimani; Teresa Norat; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Emmanuelle Kesse; Alexandra Nieters; Heiner Boeing; Anne Tjϕnneland; Kim Overvad; Carmen Martinez; Miren Dorronsoro; Carlos A. González; Timothy J. Key; Antonia Trichopoulou; Androniki Naska; Paolo Vineis; Rosario Tumino; Vittorio Krogh; H. Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita; Petra H.M. Peeters; Göran Berglund; Göran Hallmans; Eiliv Lund; Guri Skeie; Rudolf Kaaks; Elio Riboli
BACKGROUND Dietary fibre is thought to protect against colorectal cancer but this view has been challenged by recent prospective and intervention studies that showed no protective effect. METHODS We prospectively examined the association between dietary fibre intake and incidence of colorectal cancer in 519978 individuals aged 25-70 years taking part in the EPIC study, recruited from ten European countries. Participants completed a dietary questionnaire in 1992-98 and were followed up for cancer incidence. Relative risk estimates were obtained from fibre intake, categorised by sex-specific, cohort-wide quintiles, and from linear models relating the hazard ratio to fibre intake expressed as a continuous variable. FINDINGS Follow-up consisted of 1939011 person-years, and data for 1065 reported cases of colorectal cancer were included in the analysis. Dietary fibre in foods was inversely related to incidence of large bowel cancer (adjusted relative risk 0.75 [95% CI 0.59-0.95] for the highest versus lowest quintile of intake), the protective effect being greatest for the left side of the colon, and least for the rectum. After calibration with more detailed dietary data, the adjusted relative risk for the highest versus lowest quintile of fibre from food intake was 0.58 (0.41-0.85). No food source of fibre was significantly more protective than others, and non-food supplement sources of fibre were not investigated. INTERPRETATION In populations with low average intake of dietary fibre, an approximate doubling of total fibre intake from foods could reduce the risk of colorectal cancer by 40%.
BMJ | 2005
Antonia Trichopoulou; Philippos Orfanos; Teresa Norat; Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita; Marga C. Ocké; Petra H.M. Peeters; Yvonne T. van der Schouw; Heiner Boeing; Kurt Hoffmann; Paolo Boffetta; Gabriele Nagel; Giovanna Masala; Vittorio Krogh; Salvatore Panico; Rosario Tumino; Paolo Vineis; Christina Bamia; Androniki Naska; Vassiliki Benetou; Pietro Ferrari; Nadia Slimani; Guillem Pera; Carmen Martinez-Garcia; Carmen Navarro; Miguel Rodríguez-Barranco; Miren Dorronsoro; Elizabeth A Spencer; Timothy J. Key; Sheila Bingham; Kay-Tee Khaw
Abstract Objective To examine whether adherence to the modified Mediterranean diet, in which unsaturates were substituted for monounsaturates, is associated with longer life expectancy among elderly Europeans. Design Multicentre, prospective cohort study. Setting Nine European countries (Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom). Participants 74 607 men and women, aged 60 or more, without coronary heart disease, stroke, or cancer at enrolment and with complete information about dietary intake and potentially confounding variables. Main outcome measures Extent of adherence to a modified Mediterranean diet using a scoring system on a 10 point scale, and death from any cause by time of occurrence, modelled through Cox regression. Results An increase in the modified Mediterranean diet score was associated with lower overall mortality, a two unit increment corresponding to a statistically significant reduction of 8% (95% confidence interval 3% to 12%). No statistically significant evidence of heterogeneity was found among countries in the association of the score with overall mortality even though the association was stronger in Greece and Spain. When dietary exposures were calibrated across countries, the reduction in mortality was 7% (1% to 12%). Conclusion The Mediterranean diet, modified so as to apply across Europe, was associated with increased survival among older people.
BMC Public Health | 2010
Serge Hercberg; Katia Castetbon; Sébastien Czernichow; Aurélie Malon; Caroline Méjean; Emmanuelle Kesse; Mathilde Touvier; Pilar Galan
BackgroundNutrition-related chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and cancer are of multiple origin, and may be due to genetic, biologic, behavioural and environmental factors. In order to detangle the specific role of nutritional factors, very large population sample cohort studies comprising precisely measured dietary intake and all necessary information for accurately assessing potential confounding factors are needed. Widespread use of internet is an opportunity to gradually collect huge amounts of data from a large sample of volunteers that can be automatically verified and processed. The objectives of the NutriNet-Santé study are: 1) to investigate the relationship between nutrition (nutrients, foods, dietary patterns, physical activity), mortality and health outcomes; and 2) to examine the determinants of dietary patterns and nutritional status (sociological, economic, cultural, biological, cognitive, perceptions, preferences, etc.), using a web-based approach.Methods/designOur web-based prospective cohort study is being conducted for a scheduled follow-up of 10 years. Using a dedicated web site, recruitment will be carried out for 5 years so as to register 500 000 volunteers aged ≥ 18 years among whom 60% are expected to be included (having complete baseline data) and followed-up for at least 5 years for 240 000 participants. Questionnaires administered via internet at baseline and each year thereafter will assess socio-demographic and lifestyle characteristics, anthropometry, health status, physical activity and diet. Surveillance of health events will be implemented via questionnaires on hospitalisation and use of medication, and linkage with a national database on vital statistics. Biochemical samples and clinical examination will be collected in a subsample of volunteers.DiscussionSelf-administered data collection using internet as a complement to collection of biological data will enable identifying nutrition-related risks and protective factors, thereby more clearly elucidating determinants of nutritional status and their interactions. These are necessary steps for further refining nutritional recommendations aimed at improving the health status of populations.
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2005
Wael K. Al-Delaimy; Nadia Slimani; Pietro Ferrari; Timothy J. Key; Elizabeth A Spencer; Ingegerd Johansson; Gunn Johansson; I Mattisson; E Wirfalt; S. Sieri; A Agudo; Egidio Celentano; Domenico Palli; C. Sacerdote; R. Tumino; M Dorronsoro; Marga C. Ocké; H. B. Bueno-de-Mesquita; Kim Overvad; Ma Dolores Chirlaque; Antonia Trichopoulou; A. Naska; Anne Tjønneland; A. Olsen; Eiliv Lund; G Skeie; E Ardanaz; Emmanuelle Kesse; M. C. Boutron-Ruault; F. Clavel-Chapelon
Objective:The aim in this study was to assess the association between individual plasma carotenoid levels (α-carotene, β-carotene, lycopene, β-cryptoxanthin, lutein, zeaxanthin) and fruit and vegetable intakes recorded by a calibrated food questionnaire (FQ) and 24-h dietary recall records (24HDR) in nine different European countries with diverse populations and widely varying intakes of plant foods.Design:A stratified random subsample of 3089 men and women from nine countries participating in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC), who had provided blood samples and dietary and other lifestyle information between 1992 and 2000, were included.Results:β-Cryptoxanthin was most strongly correlated with total fruits (FQ r=0.52, 24HDR r=0.39), lycopene with tomato and tomato products (FQ r=0.38, 24HDR r=0.25), and α-carotene with intake of root vegetables (r=0.39) and of total carrots (r=0.38) for FQ only. Based on diet measured by FQ and adjusting for possible confounding by body mass index (BMI), age, gender, smoking status, alcohol intake, and energy intake, the strongest predictors of individual plasma carotenoid levels were fruits (R partial 2=17.2%) for β-cryptoxanthin, total carrots (R partial 2=13.4%) and root vegetables (R partial 2=13.3%) for α-carotene, and tomato products (R partial 2=13.8%) for lycopene. For 24HDR, the highest R partial 2 was for fruits in relation to β-cryptoxanthin (7.9%).Conclusions:Intakes of specific fruits and vegetables as measured by food questionnaires are good predictors of certain individual plasma carotenoid levels in our multicentre European study. At individual subject levels, FQ measurements of fruits, root vegetables and carrots, and tomato products are, respectively, good predictors of β-cryptoxanthin, α-carotene, and lycopene in plasma.
Public Health Nutrition | 2007
Christina Bamia; Dimitrios Trichopoulos; Pietro Ferrari; Kim Overvad; Lone Jeppesen Bjerregaard; Anne Tjønneland; Jytte Halkjær; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Emmanuelle Kesse; Marie Christine Boutron-Ruault; Paolo Boffetta; Gabriele Nagel; J. Linseisen; Heiner Boeing; Kurt Hoffmann; Christina Kasapa; Anastasia Orfanou; Chrysoula Travezea; Nadia Slimani; Teresa Norat; Domenico Palli; Valeria Pala; Salvatore Panico; Rosario Tumino; Carlotta Sacerdote; H. Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita; Patricia M C M Waijers; Petra H.M. Peeters; Yvonne T. van der Schouw; Antonio Berenguer
OBJECTIVE To investigate the association of a posteriori dietary patterns with overall survival of older Europeans. DESIGN AND SETTING This is a multi-centre cohort study. Cox regression analysis was used to investigate the association of the prevailing, a posteriori-derived, plant-based dietary pattern with all-cause mortality in a population of subjects who were 60 years or older at recruitment to the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC-Elderly cohort). Analyses controlled for all known potential risk factors. SUBJECTS In total, 74,607 men and women, 60 years or older at enrolment and without previous coronary heart disease, stroke or cancer, with complete information about dietary intakes and potentially confounding variables, and with known survival status as of December 2003, were included in the analysis. RESULTS An increase in the score which measures the adherence to the plant-based diet was associated with a lower overall mortality, a one standard deviation increment corresponding to a statistically significant reduction of 14% (95% confidence interval 5-23%). In country-specific analyses the apparent association was stronger in Greece, Spain, Denmark and The Netherlands, and absent in the UK and Germany. CONCLUSIONS Greater adherence to the plant-based diet that was defined a posteriori in this population of European elders is associated with lower all-cause mortality. This dietary score is moderately positively correlated with the Modified Mediterranean Diet Score that has been constructed a priori and was also shown to be beneficial for the survival of the same EPIC-Elderly cohort.
Public Health Nutrition | 2002
Sabina Sieri; Antonio Agudo; Emmanuelle Kesse; Kerstin Klipstein-Grobusch; San-José B; Ailsa Welch; V. Krogh; Robert Luben; Naomi E. Allen; Kim Overvad; Anne Tjønneland; F. Clavel-Chapelon; Anne Thiebaut; Austin Miller; Heiner Boeing; M Kolyva; Calogero Saieva; Egidio Celentano; Marga C. Ocké; Phm Peeters; Magritt Brustad; Merethe Kumle; M Dorronsoro; A Fernandez Feito; I Mattisson; Lars Weinehall; Elio Riboli; Nadia Slimani
OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to compare the quantities of alcohol and types of alcoholic beverages consumed, and the timing of consumption, in centres participating in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC). These centres, in 10 European countries, are characterised by widely differing drinking habits and frequencies of alcohol-related diseases. METHODS We collected a single standardised 24-hour dietary recall per subject from a random sample of the EPIC cohort (36 900 persons initially and 35 955 after exclusion of subjects under 35 and over 74 years of age). This provided detailed information on the distribution of alcohol consumption during the day in relation to main meals, and was used to determine weekly consumption patterns. The crude and adjusted (by age, day of week and season) means of total ethanol consumption and consumption according to type of beverage were stratified by centre and sex. RESULTS Sex was a strong determinant of drinking patterns in all 10 countries. The highest total alcohol consumption was observed in the Spanish centres (San Sebastian, 41.4 g day-1) for men and in Danish centres (Copenhagen, 20.9 g day-1) for women. The lowest total alcohol intake was in the Swedish centres (Umeå, 10.2 g day-1) in men and in Greek women (3.4 g day-1). Among men, the main contributor to total alcohol intake was wine in Mediterranean countries and beer in the Dutch, German, Swedish and Danish centres. In most centres, the main source of alcohol for women was wine except for Murcia (Spain), where it was beer. Alcohol consumption, particularly by women, increased markedly during the weekend in nearly all centres. The German, Dutch, UK (general population) and Danish centres were characterised by the highest percentages of alcohol consumption outside mealtimes. CONCLUSIONS The large variation in drinking patterns among the EPIC centres provides an opportunity to better understand the relationship between alcohol and alcohol-related diseases.
International Journal of Cancer | 2005
Emmanuelle Kesse; Marie-Christine Boutron-Ruault; Teresa Norat; Elio Riboli; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon
A protective effect of calcium and/or dairy products on colorectal cancer has been reported in epidemiological studies but the findings are considered inconsistent. In particular, it is unclear whether they act at a particular step of the adenoma‐carcinoma sequence. To investigate the effect of dairy product consumption and dietary calcium, vitamin D and phosphorus intake on the adenoma‐carcinoma sequence in the French E3N‐EPIC prospective study. The population for the study of risk factors for adenomas was composed of 516 adenoma cases, including 175 high‐risk adenomas, and of 4,804 polyp‐free subjects confirmed by colonoscopy. The population for the colorectal cancer study was composed of 172 cases and 67,312 cancer‐free subjects. Diet was assessed using a self‐administered questionnaire completed at baseline. There was a trend of decreasing risk of both adenoma (ptrend= 0.04) and cancer (ptrend=0.08) with increasing calcium intake, with RRs for adenoma and cancer of 0.80 (IC 95%=0.62–1.03) and 0.72 (95% CI=0.47–1.10), respectively, in the fourth quartile compared to the first. A protective effect of dairy products on adenoma (RRQ4 vs. Q1= 0.80, 95% CI=0.62‐1.05, ptrend= 0.04) was observed and of milk consumption on colorectal cancer (RRQ4vs. Q1= 0.54, 95% CI=0.33–0.89, ptrend= 0.09), although the latter did not reach significance. Phosphorus intake also decreased the risk of adenoma (RRQ4 vs. Q1=0.70, 95% CI=0.54–0.90, ptrend= 0.005). No vitamin D effect was identified. Our data support the hypothesis that calcium, dairy products and phosphorus exert a protective effect at certain steps of the adenoma‐carcinoma sequence.
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2005
Sheila Bingham; Teresa Norat; Aurelie Moskal; Pietro Ferrari; Nadia Slimani; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Emmanuelle Kesse; Alexandra Nieters; Heiner Boeing; Anne Tjønneland; Kim Overvad; Carmen Martinez; Miren Dorronsoro; Carlos A. González; Eva Ardanaz; Carmen Navarro; José Ramón Quirós; Timothy J. Key; Nicholas E. Day; Antonia Trichopoulou; Androniki Naska; Vittorio Krogh; Rosario Tumino; Domenico Palli; Salvatore Panico; Paolo Vineis; H. B. Bueno-de-Mesquita; Marga C. Ocké; Petra H.M. Peeters; Göran Berglund
The effect of multivariate adjustment including folate on the strong protective effect of fiber in foods on colorectal cancer risk in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition was investigated in 1,721 cases identified in the latest follow-up. The inclusion of an additional 656 cases confirmed our previously published results, with a strong and significant reduction in colorectal cancer risk of ∼9% for each uncalibrated quintile increase in fiber (Plinear trend < 0.001) compared with an 8% reduction in our previous report, which had not been adjusted for folate. Inclusion of the other covariates (physical activity, alcohol, smoking, and red and processed meat) confirmed this significant inverse association for colon cancer and strengthened the association with left-sided colon cancer (P < 0.001). After maximum adjustment, the association between fiber and rectal cancer was not significant, as in our previous analysis. The association with fiber from different food sources was analyzed, but again, there were no significance trends after maximum adjustment.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2008
Patricia Dargent-Molina; Sèverine Sabia; Mathilde Touvier; Emmanuelle Kesse; Gérard Bréart; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Marie Christine Boutron-Ruault
Excess dietary proteins and “acid ash” diets have been suspected to increase the risk of osteoporosis, but experimental and epidemiological evidence is mixed. We aimed to determine whether the association between protein intake and the overall acid‐base equilibrium of the diet (as renal net acid excretion [RNAE] estimate) and fracture risk vary according to calcium intake. During an average of 8.37 ± 1.73 yr of follow‐up, 2408 women reported a fracture (excluding high‐impact trauma) among 36,217 postmenopausal women from the E3N prospective study. We used Cox regression models to study the interaction between calcium and, respectively, proteins and RNAE, from the 1993 dietary questionnaire for fracture risk determination, adjusting for potential confounders. There was no overall association between fracture risk and total protein or RNAE. However, in the lowest quartile of calcium (<400 mg/1000 kcal), high protein intake was associated with a significant increased fracture risk (RR = 1.51 for highest versus lowest quartile; 95% CI, 1.17–1.94). An increasing fracture risk with increasing animal protein intake was also observed (trend, p < 0.0001). A similar pattern of interaction for fracture risk was observed between RNAE and calcium. In this Western population of postmenopausal women with normal to high protein intake and fairly high calcium intake, there was no overall association between total protein or RNAE and fracture risk. However, there was some evidence that high protein–high acid ash diets were associated with an increased risk of fracture when calcium intake was low (<400 mg/1000 kcal).
Cancer Causes & Control | 2005
Irene D. Bezemer; Sabina Rinaldi; Laure Dossus; Carla H. van Gils; Petra H.M. Peeters; Paulus A.H. van Noord; H. Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita; Søren Paaske Johnsen; Kim Overvad; Anja Olsen; Anne Tjønneland; Heiner Boeing; Petra H. Lahmann; Jakob Linseisen; Gabriele Nagel; Naomi E. Allen; Andrew W. Roddam; Sheila Bingham; Kay-Tee Khaw; Emmanuelle Kesse; Bertrand Tehard; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Antonio Agudo; Eva Ardanaz; J. R. Quiros; Pilar Amiano; Carmen Martinez-Garcia; M. J. Tormo; Valeria Pala; Salvatore Panico
Objectives: The risk of some cancers is positively associated with body weight, which may influence circulating levels of sex-steroid hormones, insulin and IGF-I. Interrelationships between these hormones and the associations with adiposity were evaluated in healthy women participating in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC).Methods: A cross-sectional analysis was performed on anthropometric and hormonal data from 743 pre- and 1217 postmenopausal women. Body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference were used as indicators of adiposity. C-peptide, Insulin Growth Factor (IGF)-I, Insulin Growth Factor binding protein (IGFBP)-3, androgens, estrogens and sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) were measured by immunoassays; free sex steroid concentrations were calculated.Results: BMI and waist circumference were positively correlated with estrogens in postmenopausal women and with C-peptide, free testosterone and inversely with SHBG in all women. C-peptide and IGF-I were inversely correlated with SHBG, and positively with free sex steroids in postmenopausal women. IGF-I was positively associated with postmenopausal estrogens and androgen concentrations in all women.Conclusions: Sex-steroid concentrations appear to be regulated along several axes. Adiposity correlated directly with estrogens in postmenopausal women and with insulin, resulting in lower SHBG and increased levels of free sex steroids. Independent of adiposity and insulin, IGF-I was associated with decreased SHBG levels, and increased concentrations of androgens and postmenopausal estrogens.