Triangulating Associations Between Fruit Intake and Lung Cancer Risk: Evidence from GBD Estimates, Mendelian Randomization, and Real-World Validation - PubMed
5 hours ago
- #Lung Cancer
- #Epidemiology
- #Nutrition
- Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths globally, with low fruit intake potentially contributing to regional disparities.
- The study used a triangulated approach combining GBD data, Mendelian randomization, and a hospital-based cohort to investigate the association between fruit intake and lung cancer risk.
- GBD 2021 data analysis showed approximately 66,000 deaths and 1.44 million DALYs attributable to low-fruit diets in 2021, with the highest burden in medium-SDI regions.
- Mendelian randomization supported a protective effect of genetically predicted fruit intake on lung cancer risk, though sensitivity analyses showed some inconsistency.
- A Chinese hospital cohort study found higher fruit intake remained significantly protective against lung cancer after adjusting for key confounders.
- The study concludes that insufficient fruit intake may increase lung cancer risk, with consistent findings across population-level, genetic, and clinical data.