Cumulative tea consumption is inversely associated with colorectal adenomas in adults: A cross-sectional study in a Taiwanese population
Author links open overlay panelHung-Yu Chen a, Zih-Jie Sun a b, Chung-Hao Li a, Yu-Tsung Chou a, Chih-Jen Chang c d, Feng-Hwa Lu a c, Yi-Ching Yang a c, Jin-Shang Wu a b c
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2021.101945Get rights and content
Highlights
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This study showed tea consumption was inversely related to low-risk adenomas, regardless of the cumulative tea consumption amount.
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For high-risk colorectal adenomas, negative association was only found in the largest amount of tea consumption group (≥ 42 cup-years).
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Larger cumulative amount of tea consumption was negatively related to villous-rich adenomas and ≥3 adenomas, but not adenoma size ≥ 1 cm.
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Our study may provide a study direction for general population regarding the role of tea in preventing colorectal adenomas.
Cumulative tea consumption is inversely associated with colorectal adenomas in adults: A cross-sectional study in a Taiwanese population
Author links open overlay panelHung-Yu Chen a, Zih-Jie Sun a b, Chung-Hao Li a, Yu-Tsung Chou a, Chih-Jen Chang c d, Feng-Hwa Lu a c, Yi-Ching Yang a c, Jin-Shang Wu a b c
Show more
Share
Cite
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2021.101945Get rights and content
Highlights
- •
This study showed tea consumption was inversely related to low-risk adenomas, regardless of the cumulative tea consumption amount.
- •
For high-risk colorectal adenomas, negative association was only found in the largest amount of tea consumption group (≥ 42 cup-years).
- •
Larger cumulative amount of tea consumption was negatively related to villous-rich adenomas and ≥3 adenomas, but not adenoma size ≥ 1 cm.
- •
Our study may provide a study direction for general population regarding the role of tea in preventing colorectal adenomas.