Dietary and plasma lycopene and the risk of breast cancer
            Sesso HD, Buring JE, Zhang SM, Norkus EP, Gaziano JM.
            Division  of Preventive Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 900 Commonwealth  Avenue East, Boston, MA 02215-1204, USA. hsesso@hsph.harvard.edu
            Lycopene  is potentially effective in the prevention of breast cancer from  laboratory and observational studies. Among 39,876 women initially free  of cardiovascular disease and cancer, we first conducted a prospective  cohort study of dietary lycopene and its food sources.
            Participants  completed a baseline food frequency questionnaire and provided  self-reports of breast cancer risk factors. Dietary lycopene levels were  divided into quintiles, and lycopene food sources were categorized.  During 9.9 years of follow-up, 1,076 breast cancer cases were confirmed  by medical record review.
            In a nested case-control study, we then  identified 508 breast cancer cases and 508 controls matched by age,  smoking, and follow-up time. Plasma lycopene and other carotenoids were  measured.
            In the prospective cohort study, women with increasing  quintiles of dietary lycopene had multivariate relative risks (RR) of  breast cancer of 1.00 (ref), 0.95, 1.00, 1.10, and 1.00 (P, linear trend  = 0.71). Women consuming <1.5, 1.5 to <4, 4 to <7, 7 to  <10, and > or =10 servings/week of tomato-based products had RRs  of 1.00 (ref), 1.00, 1.20, 1.18, and 1.16 (P, linear trend = 0.11).
            No  individual lycopene food sources were associated with breast cancer. In  the nested case-control study, women in increasing quartiles of plasma  lycopene had multivariate RRs of breast cancer of 1.00 (ref), 0.95,  1.15, and 0.93 (P, linear trend = 0.86).
            The stepwise addition of  individual plasma carotenoids did not impact the RRs for plasma  lycopene, nor were other carotenoids associated with breast cancer. In  conclusion, neither higher dietary nor plasma lycopene levels were  associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer in middle-aged and older  women.