Moderate alcohol consumption and levels of antioxidant vitamins and isoprostanes in postmenopausal women.
Journal
  European journal of clinical nutrition.
Citation
  Eur J Clin Nutr. 59(2):161-8
Publication date
  2005 Feb
Authors
  Hartman TJ
Baer DJ
Graham LB
Stone WL
Gunter EW
Parker CE
Albert PS
Dorgan JF
Clevidence BA
Campbell WS
Tomer KB
Judd JT
Taylor PR
Investigators
  Terryl Hartman
MeSH headings
  Alcohol Drinking
Antioxidants
Breast Neoplasms
Ethanol
Isoprostanes
Oxidative Stress
Postmenopause
MeSH qualifiers
  metabolism
epidemiology
administration & dosage
blood
drug effects
Abstract
  BACKGROUND: Although alcohol intake has been positively associated with breast cancer risk in epidemiologic studies, the mechanisms mediating this association are speculative. OBJECTIVE: The Postmenopausal Women's Alcohol Study was designed to explore the effects of moderate alcohol consumption on potential risk factors for breast cancer. In the present analysis, we evaluated the relationship of alcohol consumption with antioxidant nutrients and a biomarker of oxidative stress. DESIGN: Participants (n=53) consumed a controlled diet plus each of three treatments (15 or 30 g alcohol/day or a no-alcohol placebo beverage), during three 8-week periods in random order. We measured the antioxidants, vitamin E (alpha (alpha)- and gamma (gamma)-tocopherols), selenium, and vitamin C in fasting blood samples which were collected at the end of diet periods, treated and frozen for assay at the end of the study. We also measured 15-F(2t)-IsoP isoprostane, produced by lipid peroxidation, which serves as an indicator of oxidative stress and may serve as a biomarker for conditions favorable to carcinogenesis. RESULTS: After adjusting for BMI (all models) and total serum cholesterol (tocopherol and isoprostane models) we observed a significant 4.6% decrease (P=0.02) in alpha-tocopherol and a marginally significant 4.9% increase (P=0.07) in isoprostane levels when women consumed 30 g alcohol/day (P=0.06 and 0.05 for overall effect of alcohol on alpha-tocopherol and isoprostanes, respectively). The other antioxidants were not significantly modified by the alcohol treatment. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that moderate alcohol consumption increases some biomarkers of oxidative stress in postmenopausal women.