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Carlos Cuello, Pelayo Correa, William Haenszel, Guido Gordillo, Charles Brown, Michael Archer, Steven Tannenbaum, Gastric Cancer in Colombia. I. Cancer Risk and Suspect Environmental Agents, JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Volume 57, Issue 5, November 1976, Pages 1015–1020, https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/57.5.1015
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Abstract
A case-control study of patients discharged from hospitals revealed fourfold differences in geographic variation in stomach cancer risk within the Department of Nariño (Colombia). Data from gastroscopic surveys of population groups, samples of water supplies, and urine and saliva in Nariño also indicated a generally positive correlation among the following parameters: 1) gastric cancer risk, 2) prevalence of chronic atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia, 3) nitrate content of well waters, and 4) nitrate excretion by the population. Urinary excretion reflected the ingestion of nitrates, and this implied a higher average intake of nitrates in the populations at high risk for stomach cancer. The Nariño data could be construed as presumptive epidemiologic evidence for the role of nitrate availability in the etiology of stomach cancer.