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Long-term yogurt intake and colorectal cancer incidence subclassified by abundance in tumor.

Gut microbes 2025 Vol.17(1) p. 2452237

Ugai S, Liu L, Kosumi K, Kawamura H, Hamada T, Mima K, Arima K, Okadome K, Yao Q, Matsuda K, Zhong Y, Mizuno H, Chan AT, Garrett WS, Song M, Giannakis M, Giovannucci EL, Zhang X, Ogino S, Ugai T

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Evidence suggests a tumor-suppressive effect of the intake of yogurt, which typically contains .

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APA Ugai S, Liu L, et al. (2025). Long-term yogurt intake and colorectal cancer incidence subclassified by abundance in tumor.. Gut microbes, 17(1), 2452237. https://doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2025.2452237
MLA Ugai S, et al.. "Long-term yogurt intake and colorectal cancer incidence subclassified by abundance in tumor.." Gut microbes, vol. 17, no. 1, 2025, pp. 2452237.
PMID 39937126

Abstract

Evidence suggests a tumor-suppressive effect of the intake of yogurt, which typically contains . We hypothesized that long-term yogurt intake might be associated with colorectal cancer incidence differentially by tumor subgroups according to the amount of tissue . We utilized the prospective cohort incident-tumor biobank method and resources of two prospective cohort studies. Inverse probability weighted multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression was used to assess differential associations of yogurt intake with the incidence of colorectal carcinomas subclassified by the abundance of tumor tissue . During follow-up of 132,056 individuals, we documented 3,079 incident colorectal cancer cases, including 1,121 with available tissue data. The association between long-term yogurt intake and colorectal cancer incidence differed by abundance (P heterogeneity = 0.0002). Multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) (with 95% confidence intervals) in individuals who consumed ≥2 servings/week (vs. <1 serving/month) of yogurt were 0.80 (0.50-1.28) for -positive tumor and 1.09 (0.81-1.46) for -negative tumor. This differential association was also observed in a subgroup analysis of proximal colon cancer (P heterogeneity = 0.018). Long-term yogurt intake may be differentially associated with the incidence of proximal colon cancer according to abundance, suggesting the antitumor effect of yogurt intake on the specific tumor subgroup.

MeSH Terms

Yogurt; Humans; Bifidobacterium; Colorectal Neoplasms; Male; Female; Middle Aged; Incidence; Prospective Studies; Aged; Adult; Gastrointestinal Microbiome