Associations of animal source foods, cardiovascular disease history, and health behaviors from the national health and nutrition examination survey: 2013–2016

Adam Eckart , Amir Bhochhibhoya , James Stavitz , Pragya Sharma Ghimire , Kathleen Mathieson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Some individuals adopt vegetarian or plant-based diets to improve their health. Observational evidence suggests diets composed of higher amounts of animal-source foods (ASFs) are associated with increased risk for disease and early mortality. In many of these studies, those who ate fewer animal-source foods reported fewer disease risk factors and unhealthy behaviors, which could indicate bias.

Purpose

This study aims to examine the relationships between ASF consumption, health behaviors, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevalence in a population-representative sample of U.S. civilians controlling for confounders.

Methods

Respondent data were collected from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2013–2016 collection years. Collected data included demographics, ASF intake, healthy lifestyle variables, body mass index, and blood lipids.

Results

There was a higher proportion of those with CVD history who consumed red meat (61.3%; C.I. 41.7%–77.8%), but the proportion was lower for white (23.3%; C.I. 12.6%–39.0%) and processed meat (15.4%; C.I. 6.5%–32.3%). When adjusted for sex, the odds of CVD history increased for red meat compared to processed meat consumption (OR 2.95; C.I. 1.14–7.66). Unhealthy lifestyle increased the odds of CVD history by nearly 8-fold (OR 7.8; C.I. 3.44–17.7). Individual factors including age, smoking history, body mass index, and blood lipids, and demographic factors, including education level, race, and income, were also associated with increased odds for CVD history. ROC analysis revealed 77.2% AUC for CVD history classified by individual factors (BMI ≥30 kg/m**2, ≤ 30 min moderate physical activity, smoker, fiber intake ≤25 g, dental visit more than two years ago, and age above 60 years). Three or more factors moderately predicted CVD history when optimized for sensitivity (73.4%) and specificity (71%). Adjusted for sex, the relationship between CVD and moderate physical activity became stronger possibly reflecting lifestyle changes. Despite evidence of lifestyle changes, modifiable risk factors persisted in the CVD group. CVD diagnosis in males was substantially delayed compared to females concerning the sex-specific age cutoff associated with higher risk. The healthy lifestyle group was characterized by earlier CVD diagnosis and fewer overall risk factors compared to the unhealthy lifestyle group.

Conclusion

CVD history was strongly associated with demographic, lifestyle, and dietary factors. Future research should focus on multidimensional models for disease risk stratification and prevention, including individual, behavioral, and sociodemographic factors.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

2013-2016年国家健康和营养检查调查中动物源性食物、心血管疾病史和健康行为的相关性
背景一些人采用素食或植物性饮食来改善健康。观察证据表明,由大量动物源性食物(ASF)组成的饮食与疾病风险和早期死亡率的增加有关。在许多此类研究中,那些食用较少动物源性食物的人报告的疾病风险因素和不健康行为较少,这可能表明存在偏见。目的本研究旨在检验ASF消费、健康行为和心血管疾病(CVD)患病率之间的关系,以控制混杂因素的美国平民为代表。方法受访者数据收集自2013-2016年国家健康和营养检查调查(NHANES)。收集的数据包括人口统计、ASF摄入量、健康生活方式变量、体重指数和血脂。结果有心血管疾病病史的人食用红肉的比例较高(61.3%;C.I.41.7%-77.8%),但食用白肉(23.3%;C.I.12.6%-39.0%)和加工肉(15.4%;C.I.6.5%-32.3%)的比例较低,与食用加工肉相比,红肉患心血管疾病史的几率增加(OR 2.95;C.I.1.14-7.66)。不健康的生活方式使心血管疾病史几率增加了近8倍(OR 7.8;C.I.3.44-17.7)。包括年龄、吸烟史、体重指数和血脂在内的个体因素,以及包括教育水平、种族和收入在内的人口统计因素,也与CVD病史的几率增加有关。ROC分析显示,心血管疾病史的AUC为77.2%,按个体因素分类(BMI≥30 kg/m**2,≤30分钟中等体力活动,吸烟者,纤维摄入量≤25 g,两年以上牙科就诊,年龄60岁以上)。当对敏感性(73.4%)和特异性(71%)进行优化时,三个或更多因素适度预测CVD病史。经性别调整后,心血管疾病和适度体育活动之间的关系变得更强,这可能反映了生活方式的变化。尽管有证据表明生活方式发生了改变,但心血管疾病组中可改变的风险因素仍然存在。与女性相比,男性的心血管疾病诊断明显延迟,因为性别特异性年龄分界与更高的风险相关。与不健康的生活方式组相比,健康生活方式组的特征是CVD诊断更早,总体风险因素更少。结论心血管疾病病史与人口统计学、生活方式和饮食因素密切相关。未来的研究应侧重于疾病风险分层和预防的多维模型,包括个人、行为和社会人口因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global Epidemiology
Global Epidemiology Medicine-Infectious Diseases
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
39 days
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