Association Between Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Intake and Liver Cancer Risk in the Women’s Health Initiative
Zhao L, Coday M, Garcia D, Li X, Lopez-Pentecost M, Manson J, McGlynn K, Mossavar-Rahmani Y, Naughton M, Saquib N, Sesso H, Shadyab A, Simon M, Snetselaar L, Tabung F, Tinker L, Tobias D, VoPham T, Zhang X. Association Between Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Intake and Liver Cancer Risk in the Women’s Health Initiative. Current Developments In Nutrition 2022, 6: 259. PMCID: PMC9193518, DOI: 10.1093/cdn/nzac052.026.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSugar-sweetened beverage intakeSugar-sweetened beveragesRisk of liver cancerHigher SSB intakeHistory of diabetesSSB intakeIntake of sugar-sweetened beveragesNon-statistically significant positive associationWomen's Health Initiative Observational StudyFruit drinksHazard ratioIncident liver cancerSoft drinksConfidence intervalsMultivariable hazard ratiosLiver cancer riskWomen's Health InitiativeFood frequency questionnaireRisk factorsModifiable risk factorsSelf-administered questionnaireMedical record reviewNon-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug useCox proportional hazards regression modelsProportional hazards regression models
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply