医学
优势比
发育不良
产科
阴道镜检查
HPV感染
置信区间
宫颈癌
逻辑回归
妇科
病例对照研究
入射(几何)
内科学
癌症
物理
光学
作者
C. E. Butterworth,Kenneth D. Hatch,Maurizio Macaluso,Philip A. Cole,Howerde E. Sauberlich,Seng-Jaw Soong,Matthew Borst,Vicki L. Baker
出处
期刊:JAMA
[American Medical Association]
日期:1992-01-22
卷期号:267 (4): 528-528
被引量:168
标识
DOI:10.1001/jama.1992.03480040076034
摘要
To test the hypothesis that nutritional deficiency affects the incidence of cervical dysplasia in young women.Case-control study. Participants were derived from community family-planning clinics and referrals to a colposcopy center.A total of 726 subjects were screened, yielding 294 cases of dysplasia and 170 controls defined by coexistent cytologic and colposcopic evidence.Planned prior to data collection. Odds ratios were computed using logistic regression models to evaluate association between cervical dysplasia and sociodemographic, sexual, and reproductive factors; smoking; oral contraceptive use; human papillomavirus (HPV) infection; and 12 nutritional indices determined by blind analysis of nonfasting blood specimens.The number of sexual partners, parity, oral contraceptive use, and HPV-16 infection were significantly associated with cervical dysplasia. Plasma nutrient levels were generally not associated with risk. However, red blood cell folate levels at or below 660 nmol/L interacted with HPV-16 infection. The adjusted odds ratio for HPV-16 was 1.1 among women with folate levels above 660 nmol/L but 5.1 (95% confidence interval, 2.3 to 11) among women with lower levels. Interactions of red blood cell folate levels with cigarette smoking and parity were also present but were not statistically significant.Low red blood cell folate levels enhance the effect of other risk factors for cervical dysplasia and, in particular, that of HPV-16 infection.
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