Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.

The concentrations of retinol and beta carotene were measured in serum samples taken from 113 women with cervical cancer, 32 with invasive and 81 with pre-invasive disease, and compared with those from 226 age-matched control women. There was little difference in serum retinol levels between women w...

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Main Authors: Harris, R. W., Forman, D., Doll, R., Vessey, M. P., Wald, N. J.
Format: Online
Language:English
Published: 1986
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2001384/
id pubmed-2001384
recordtype oai_dc
spelling pubmed-20013842009-09-10 Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A. Harris, R. W. Forman, D. Doll, R. Vessey, M. P. Wald, N. J. Research Article The concentrations of retinol and beta carotene were measured in serum samples taken from 113 women with cervical cancer, 32 with invasive and 81 with pre-invasive disease, and compared with those from 226 age-matched control women. There was little difference in serum retinol levels between women with cancer of the cervix, at any stage, and the control women, after adjusting for potential confounding factors. Serum beta carotene concentrations were likewise similar in women with invasive disease and the controls. However mean beta carotene levels were significantly reduced in women with pre-invasive disease compared to the controls (221.3 cf. 291.6 micrograms l-1, P less than 0.05). This reduction was more evident amongst women with a diagnosis of carcinoma-in-situ (mean 213.1 micrograms l-1 than amongst those with severe dysplasia (mean 228.7 micrograms l-1. There is a negative trend between beta carotene and risk of pre-invasive disease which is of borderline significance. These data have also been used to investigate the effects of smoking and oral contraceptive usage on the serum levels of retinol and beta carotene. Both habits tend to increase retinol and decrease beta carotene concentrations. 1986-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2001384/ /pubmed/3718822 Text en
repository_type Open Access Journal
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution US National Center for Biotechnology Information
building NCBI PubMed
collection Online Access
language English
format Online
author Harris, R. W.
Forman, D.
Doll, R.
Vessey, M. P.
Wald, N. J.
spellingShingle Harris, R. W.
Forman, D.
Doll, R.
Vessey, M. P.
Wald, N. J.
Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.
author_facet Harris, R. W.
Forman, D.
Doll, R.
Vessey, M. P.
Wald, N. J.
author_sort Harris, R. W.
title Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.
title_short Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.
title_full Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.
title_fullStr Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.
title_full_unstemmed Cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin A.
title_sort cancer of the cervix uteri and vitamin a.
description The concentrations of retinol and beta carotene were measured in serum samples taken from 113 women with cervical cancer, 32 with invasive and 81 with pre-invasive disease, and compared with those from 226 age-matched control women. There was little difference in serum retinol levels between women with cancer of the cervix, at any stage, and the control women, after adjusting for potential confounding factors. Serum beta carotene concentrations were likewise similar in women with invasive disease and the controls. However mean beta carotene levels were significantly reduced in women with pre-invasive disease compared to the controls (221.3 cf. 291.6 micrograms l-1, P less than 0.05). This reduction was more evident amongst women with a diagnosis of carcinoma-in-situ (mean 213.1 micrograms l-1 than amongst those with severe dysplasia (mean 228.7 micrograms l-1. There is a negative trend between beta carotene and risk of pre-invasive disease which is of borderline significance. These data have also been used to investigate the effects of smoking and oral contraceptive usage on the serum levels of retinol and beta carotene. Both habits tend to increase retinol and decrease beta carotene concentrations.
publishDate 1986
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2001384/
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