A follow-up study of urinary markers of aflatoxin exposure and liver cancer risk in Shanghai, People's Republic of China
- PMID: 8118382
A follow-up study of urinary markers of aflatoxin exposure and liver cancer risk in Shanghai, People's Republic of China
Abstract
A cohort of 18,244 mostly middle-aged (45-64 years) men residing in four small geographically defined areas of Shanghai was accrued between January 1986 and September 1989. In addition to an in-person interview regarding dietary and other past exposures, each subject donated a single void urine sample at recruitment so that the presence of aflatoxins in urine could be assessed. In addition, a 1-year survey of market foods in Shanghai was conducted to quantitatively estimate the extent of aflatoxin exposure in the study population. After close to 70,000 person-years of follow-up, 55 incident cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) had been identified. Levels of urinary aflatoxin B1 and the oxidative metabolites, including the major aflatoxin nucleic acid adduct, aflatoxin-N7-guanine, were determined for 50 of the 55 identified cases of HCC. Two hundred sixty-seven controls were chosen randomly from the cohort; they were matched to the 50 cases by age (within 1 year), time of specimen collection (within 1 month), and residence. After integrating the high-pressure liquid chromatography chromatograms to measure aflatoxin-N7-guanine, aflatoxin M1, aflatoxin P1, and aflatoxin B1, 49, 67, 53, and 71 of the urine samples had detectable levels of these compounds, respectively. The aflatoxin metabolite detected at the highest concentration was aflatoxin P1; the range was 0.59-16.0 ng/ml. The range of aflatoxin M1 in the urine was 0.17-5.2 ng/ml. The aflatoxin-N7-guanine adduct range was 0.3-1.81 ng/ml in the 49 positive samples.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Comment in
-
Correspondence re: G-S. Qian, et al., A follow-up study of urinary markers of aflatoxin exposure and liver cancer risk in Shanghai, People's Republic of China. Cancer Epidemiol., Biomarkers & Prev., 3:3-10, 1994, and C.C. Harris, Solving the viral-chemical puzzle of human liver carcinogenesis. Cancer Epidemiol., Biomarkers & Prev., 3:1-2, 1994.Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1994 Sep;3(6):519-21. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1994. PMID: 8000305 No abstract available.
-
Solving the viral-chemical puzzle of human liver carcinogenesis.Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1994 Jan-Feb;3(1):1-2. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1994. PMID: 8118377 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Medical
Miscellaneous