Abstract

The association between diet quality, captured by the Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS), and mortality was studied among 1184 individuals diagnosed with head and neck cancer (HNC) who reflected on the year preceding diagnosis about their usual diet using National Cancer Institute's Diet History Questionnaire (DHQ). Intakes of nine dietary components were scored and summed to construct the MDS (sample: median = 4; range (0-9); lower MDS reflected poorer diet quality; 5-year survival probability = 0.62). Cox regression estimated 5-year hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (95CI) for all-cause mortality and for HNC-specific death for contrasts of MDS quintiles. Effect measure modification (EMM) by tumor features [human papillomavirus (HPV) positivity; anatomic site] and sociodemographic behavioral factors [race, body mass index (BMI), smoking, alcohol consumption] was explored. The 5-year [HR (95CI); P-trend] for all-cause mortality and HNC-specific mortality for highest versus lowest MDS quintile contrasts were [0.51 (0.33, 0.80); 0.014] and [0.43 (0.22, 0.85); 0.004], respectively. A unit increase in MDS adherence resulted in a 15% reduction of the 5-year HR for HNC-specific death for tumors located at the oral cavity [HR (95CI): 0.85 (0.75, 0.96)]. Poor diet quality (MDS ≤ 4) interacted with lower BMI (kg/m2 < 25) and separately with ever-using alcohol to produce 5-year HRs for all-cause and HNC-specific mortality that were statistically significantly larger than the sum of the individual HRs representing each combination (Poor diet quality + lower BMI; Poor diet quality + ever-using alcohol). Greater adherence to a Mediterranean diet pattern prior to HNC diagnosis may reduce post-diagnosis mortality.

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