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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 81, No. 1, 218S-222S, January 2005
© 2005 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


DIETARY POLYPHENOLS AND HEALTH: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 1ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON POLYPHENOLS AND HEALTH

The history of ß-carotene and cancers: from observational to intervention studies. What lessons can be drawn for future research on polyphenols?1,2,3

Serge Hercberg

1 From U557 INSERM (UMR INSERM/INRA/CNAM) and Unité de Surveillance et d'Epidémiologie Nutritionnelle, InVS/CNAM, Institut Scientifique et Technique de la Nutrition et de l'Alimentation/CNAM, Paris

ABSTRACT

An important question being raised by nutritionists today is whether available scientific data support an important role for polyphenols in the prevention of pathologic conditions that represent an important public health burden, such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, and osteoporosis. More broadly, when can we consider scientific knowledge sufficient to allow specific public health implications and recommendations? The history of the relationship between ß-carotene and cancer illustrates the complexity of the research process leading to the demonstration of a causal relationship between nutritional factors and the prevention of disease. The ß-carotene story, which has developed in the past 30 y, is particularly significant and illustrative because of apparent controversies that are far from resolved. This is an extremely interesting example from which many lessons can be learned. For ß-carotene, we need to collect sufficient information from experimental, clinical, and epidemiologic research before we support any specific public health recommendations. The same principles must be applied to recommendations regarding polyphenols (in particular, which polyphenols, at which doses, to achieve which benefits for which populations). If these questions are not answered, then we run the risk of needing to renounce recommendations regarding polyphenols in the future, damaging the credibility of nutritional recommendations for public health.

Key Words: ß-Carotene • cancers • recommendations • intervention trial • polyphenols







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