Prostate Cancer and Dietary Sugar Intake: A Systematic Review
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. The Protocol and Registration
2.2. The Search Strategy
2.3. Selection of the Studies
2.4. The Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
- (i)
- Included adult men (≥18 years);
- (ii)
- Measured sugar intake quantitatively (e.g., total sugars, added sugars, sugar-sweetened beverages);
- (iii)
- Reported prostate cancer risk, incidence, or mortality as a primary or secondary outcome;
- (iv)
- Reported sugar intake as an independent exposure or measured it in combination with other nutrients without disaggregation;
- (v)
- Were observational studies (cohort, case–control, or cross-sectional);
- (vi)
- Were published in English in peer-reviewed journals.
- (i)
- Did not report the effect estimates or necessary data (e.g., odds ratios, hazard ratios, relative risks);
- (ii)
- Focused on animal or in vitro models;
- (iii)
- Were editorials, reviews, conference abstracts, or theses;
- (iv)
- Included participants with diagnosed cancer at the baseline (except in mortality outcome studies).
2.5. The Data Extraction
2.6. The Study Exposure
2.7. The Study Outcomes
2.8. Quality Evaluation
3. Results
3.1. The Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.2. The Studies’ Exposure and Outcome Assessment Methods
3.3. Confounding Factors
3.4. The Study Findings
3.5. Quality Assessments
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PEO | Keywords with Boolean Operators and Truncation |
---|---|
Population (Men) | M#n OR male OR males OR “adult m#n” OR “human males” OR “middle-aged m#n” OR “elderly m#n” |
Exposure (Sugar) | sugar* OR “dietary sugar*” OR “added sugar*” OR “free sugar*” OR sucrose OR fructose OR glucose OR “sugar-sweetened beverage*” OR “soft drink*” OR soda OR “sugary drink*” OR “sweetened food*” OR “high-sugar diet*” OR “sugar-rich diet*” |
Outcome (Prostate Cancer) | “prostate cancer” OR “prostatic cancer” OR “prostate neoplasm*” OR “prostatic neoplasm*” OR “prostate carcinoma” OR “prostate malignanc*” OR “prostate tumor*” OR “prostate adenocarcinoma” |
Combined Search | (men OR male OR males) AND (sugar* OR “added sugar*” OR “sugar-sweetened beverage*” OR soda) AND (“prostate cancer” OR “prostate neoplasm*” OR “prostate tumor*”) |
Author, Year | Country | Study Design | Age Range or Mean Age | Number of Participants | Participants in Study |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liu et al., 2021 [11] | USA | CS | Mean age: 58.1 (± 13.6) | 6403 | Men aged >40 years from the NHANES study with no history of malignancy. |
Trudeau et al., 2020 [17] | Canada | CC | Mean age: Cases: 64 years Control: 65 years | Cases (n = 1919) Controls (n = 1991) | Cases enrolled from 7–9 French language hospitals in Montreal. Controls enrolled randomly from Quebec’s permanent electoral list of French electors |
Chazelas et al., 2019 [19] | France | LG (9 years follow-up) | Mean age: At baseline: 46.9 At cancer diagnosis: 58.5 | 291 | Adults from the French NutriNet-Sante Cohort not previously diagnosed with any type of cancer. |
Makarem et al., 2018 [16] | USA | LG (22 years follow-up) | 26–84 (55.4) | 157 | Adults from the Framingham Offspring Cohort. |
Miles et al., 2018 [12] | USA | LG (9 years follow-up) | 55–74 years | 1996 | Men from the general population from the PLCO Cancer Screening Trial |
Drake et al., 2012 [18] | Sweden | LG (15 years follow-up) | 45–73 (58.5) | 817 | Cases of prostate cancer diagnosed between 1992 and 2009 from the Malmo Diet and Cancer Cohort Study |
Author, Year | Type of Sugar Measured | Sugar Intake Assessment Tool | Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment Methods | Confounding Factors |
---|---|---|---|---|
Liu et al., 2021 [11] | Total dietary sugar intake | USDA AMPM | Hybritech PSA method | Age, SES, BMI, smoking, and history of diabetes, hypertension, and coronary heart disease/stroke. |
Trudeau et al., 2020 [17] | Western Sweet and Beverage intake | 63-item FFQ |
| Age, ethnicity, education, family history of prostate cancer, timing of last screening. |
Chazelas et al., 2019 [19] | Sugary drinks | Three 24-dietary records | Medical records and ICD-10 | Age, sex, energy intake, smoking, family history of cancer and diabetes, BMI, physical activity. |
Makarem et al., 2018 [16] |
| Semi-quantitative 126-item Harvard FFQ | Medical and pathology records | Age, sex, smoking, alcohol, energy intake, BMI, waist circumference, chronic diseases (CVD and diabetes) history, physical activity, antioxidant use. |
Miles et al., 2018 [12] | Concentrated sugars (sugar sweetened beverages, desserts, and fruit juices) | DHQ FFQ |
| Study center, age, race, education, smoking, BMI, history of diabetes and prostate cancer, number PSA screens over the previous three years, energy intake (kcal/day), red and processed meat (g/day), fruit (servings/day), and vegetables (servings/day). |
Drake et al., 2012 [18] |
|
|
| Age, BMI, waist circumference, alcohol intake, selenium intake, calcium intake, smoking, educational level, physical activity, diabetes diagnosis, history of cardiovascular event, born in Sweden, past food habit change, and energy intake. |
Author, Year | Association Between Sugar Intake and Prostatic Cancer | Association Direction | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
β [95% CI] (p-Value) in Fully Adjusted Multivariable Weighted Linear Regression | Hazard Ratio [CI] (p-Value) | OR [CI] (p-Value) in Adjusted Logistic Regression | |||
Cross-sectional study | |||||
Liu et al., 2021 [11] | For each additional 1 g of sugar intake, the PSA concentrations were increased by 0.003 ng/mL [0.001–0.005] (0.0029) (log2-transformed) | ↑ | |||
Case–control study | |||||
Trudeau et al., 2020 [17] | 1.35 [1.10–1.66] (0.002) ‡ | ↑ | |||
Longitudinal studies | |||||
Chazelas et al., 2019 [19] | 1.1 [0.92–1.31] (0.31) * | ⇌ | |||
Makarem et al., 2018 [16] | Sugary foods ^ | 1.00 [0.62–1.62] (p > 0.05) | ⇌ | ||
Sugary drinks ^ | 1.36 [0.88–2.09] (p > 0.05) | ⇌ | |||
Miles et al., 2018 [12] | Sugar-sweetened beverages ^ | 1.21 [1.06–1.39] (p < 0.01) | ↑ | ||
Fruit juices ^ | 1.07 [0.94–1.22] (p > 0.05) | ⇌ | |||
Desserts ^ | 0.95 [0.83–1.10] (p > 0.05) | ⇌ | |||
Drake et al., 2012 [18] | Monosaccharides | 1.18 [0.92–1.52] (0.59) | ⇌ | ||
Sucrose | 0.9 [0.71–1.15] (0.83) | ⇌ | |||
Sugar-sweetened beverages | 1.13 [0.92–1.38] (0.22) | ⇌ | |||
Cakes and biscuits | 1.21 [0.94–1.56] (0.23) | ⇌ | |||
Sweets and sugar | 0.93 [0.73–1.19] (0.63) | ⇌ | |||
Fruit juices | 0.99 [0.81–1.22] (0.62) | ⇌ |
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Khaled, K.; Jardaly, H.; Almilaji, O. Prostate Cancer and Dietary Sugar Intake: A Systematic Review. Onco 2025, 5, 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/onco5030031
Khaled K, Jardaly H, Almilaji O. Prostate Cancer and Dietary Sugar Intake: A Systematic Review. Onco. 2025; 5(3):31. https://doi.org/10.3390/onco5030031
Chicago/Turabian StyleKhaled, Karim, Hala Jardaly, and Orouba Almilaji. 2025. "Prostate Cancer and Dietary Sugar Intake: A Systematic Review" Onco 5, no. 3: 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/onco5030031
APA StyleKhaled, K., Jardaly, H., & Almilaji, O. (2025). Prostate Cancer and Dietary Sugar Intake: A Systematic Review. Onco, 5(3), 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/onco5030031