Association between habitual adherence to the planetary-health diet and mortality and major chronic disease risk among UK Biobank participants.

IF 6.5 1区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Nena Karavasiloglou, Flurina Suter, Alysha S Thompson, Giulia Pestoni, Aedín Cassidy, Tilman Kühn, Sabine Rohrmann
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Since a healthy diet is a key contributor to human health and the risk of developing noncommunicable diseases, the EAT-Lancet Commission proposed the 'planetary health diet' (PHD) in 2019. The literature on the association between the PHD and the risk for health outcomes is sparse and diverse.

Objective: To increase the knowledge of the potential effects of the PHD on human health, we analyzed data from a prospective cohort study, investigating whether habitual adherence to the PHD was associated with health outcomes among participants in the UK Biobank cohort study.

Methods: Depending on the health outcome, between 196,099 and 204,778 participants of the UK Biobank, aged 39 to 72 years at recruitment were included. The UK Biobank Oxford WebQ 24-hour dietary assessment data was used to define a scoring system, ranging from 0 to 14 points, that reflects participants' habitual adherence to the PHD. Habitual dietary intake was determined by using the Multiple Source Method. Cox proportional hazards regression models were fitted to investigate the association of adherence to the PHD with all-cause mortality, cancer risk, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.

Results: For every 1-point increase in the PHD score a 3% lower all-cause mortality (HR = 0.97; 95% CI: 0.96, 0.99) and a 9% lower lung cancer risk (0.91; 0.87, 0.96) was observed. A trend between adherence to the PHD and all-cancer risk (0.99; 0.98, 1.00) and a null association between PHD adherence and CVD risk (0.99; 0.96, 1.02) were found.

Conclusions: Our results point towards an inverse association between habitual adherence to the PHD and all-cause mortality and cancer risk, although the associations with cancer depended on the cancer type. Our study provides additional evidence that sustainable diets can improve human health.

英国生物银行参与者中习惯性坚持行星健康饮食与死亡率和主要慢性疾病风险之间的关系。
背景:由于健康饮食是人类健康和患非传染性疾病风险的关键因素,EAT-Lancet委员会于2019年提出了“全球健康饮食”(PHD)。关于博士学位与健康结果风险之间关系的文献很少,而且种类繁多。目的:为了增加对PHD对人类健康潜在影响的认识,我们分析了来自一项前瞻性队列研究的数据,调查英国生物银行队列研究中参与者的习惯性坚持PHD是否与健康结果相关。方法:根据健康结果,纳入英国生物银行的196,099至204,778名参与者,招募时年龄在39至72岁之间。英国牛津生物银行WebQ 24小时饮食评估数据被用来定义一个评分系统,评分范围从0到14分,反映了参与者对博士学位的习惯性坚持。采用多源法测定习惯性膳食摄入量。我们拟合Cox比例风险回归模型,以调查坚持PHD与全因死亡率、癌症风险和心血管疾病(CVD)风险的关系。结果:博士分数每增加1分,全因死亡率降低3% (HR = 0.97;95% CI: 0.96, 0.99),肺癌风险降低9% (0.91;0.87, 0.96)。坚持博士学位与所有癌症风险之间的趋势(0.99;0.98, 1.00),坚持服用博士与心血管疾病风险之间无关联(0.99;0.96, 1.02)。结论:我们的研究结果表明,习惯坚持博士学位与全因死亡率和癌症风险之间呈负相关,尽管与癌症的关联取决于癌症类型。我们的研究提供了额外的证据,证明可持续饮食可以改善人类健康。
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
CiteScore
12.40
自引率
4.20%
发文量
332
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition is recognized as the most highly rated peer-reviewed, primary research journal in nutrition and dietetics.It focuses on publishing the latest research on various topics in nutrition, including but not limited to obesity, vitamins and minerals, nutrition and disease, and energy metabolism. Purpose: The purpose of AJCN is to: Publish original research studies relevant to human and clinical nutrition. Consider well-controlled clinical studies describing scientific mechanisms, efficacy, and safety of dietary interventions in the context of disease prevention or health benefits. Encourage public health and epidemiologic studies relevant to human nutrition. Promote innovative investigations of nutritional questions employing epigenetic, genomic, proteomic, and metabolomic approaches. Include solicited editorials, book reviews, solicited or unsolicited review articles, invited controversy position papers, and letters to the Editor related to prior AJCN articles. Peer Review Process: All submitted material with scientific content undergoes peer review by the Editors or their designees before acceptance for publication.
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