膳食鸡蛋、鸡蛋营养素、体重指数多基因评分、"西方模式 "饮食和体重变化,妇女健康倡议的前瞻性分析

IF 6.6 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
James A. Greenberg , May M. Cheung , Murray Gross , Heather M. Ochs-Balcom , Xinyin Jiang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的鸡蛋含有营养物质,有助于丰富绝经后妇女的饮食。食用鸡蛋和体重增加与严重慢性疾病风险的增加有关。体重增加可能是食用鸡蛋与严重慢性疾病之间的中介因素。然而,关于绝经后妇女食用鸡蛋与体重之间关系的研究很少,而且没有一项研究考虑了体重增加的遗传倾向。我们的目的是研究绝经后妇女食用鸡蛋、体重和遗传易感性之间的关系,以了解体重指数(BMI)升高的原因。方法我们使用多变量广义线性混合模型分析了 4439 名欧洲裔健康妇女健康倡议参与者在 6 年随访期间的数据,根据体重和从 GWAS 元分析效应等位基因频率得出的 BMI 多基因评分(PGS-BMI),对鸡蛋和鸡蛋营养素摄入量(通过食物频率问卷测量)进行了前瞻性评估。结果我们发现,在 6 年随访期间,鸡蛋摄入量的变化与体重之间存在正相关。例如,在第 3 年,鸡蛋摄入量增加 2.0 个/周的女性比鸡蛋摄入量减少 2.4 个/周的女性体重增加了 0.70 公斤(95%CI:0.34,1.07,p = 0.0002),p 线性为 0.0001。胆固醇摄入量和胆碱摄入量与甜菜碱摄入量也有类似的显著关联。探索性分析显示1)女性只有在摄入较多 "西方模式 "食物(包括加工肉类和红肉、炸薯条、甜食和甜点、含糖饮料、油炸食品、膳食脂肪和膳食能量)时,才会表现出这些显著的关联;2)PGS-BMI 与体重变化之间存在显著的前瞻性正关联,但仅限于鸡蛋摄入量变化的前五分之一。结论我们发现,在 "妇女健康倡议 "中,欧洲血统的绝经后健康妇女的体重变化与鸡蛋摄入量、胆固醇摄入量和胆碱摄入量的变化之间存在明显的前瞻性正相关。探索性分析显示1)只有摄入大量 "西式 "食物的妇女才会出现这些明显的关联;2)BMI 升高遗传易感性较高的妇女只有在大量增加鸡蛋摄入量的情况下体重才会增加。我们的研究结果需要证实。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Dietary eggs, egg nutrients, polygenic score for body mass index, “Western pattern” diet, and weight change, a prospective analysis in the Women's health initiative

Dietary eggs, egg nutrients, polygenic score for body mass index, “Western pattern” diet, and weight change, a prospective analysis in the Women's health initiative

Background & aims

Eggs contain nutrients which could help enrich the diets of postmenopausal women. Egg consumption and elevated body weight have been associated with elevated risk of serious chronic disease. It is possible that elevated body weight mediates between egg consumption and serious chronic disease. However, few studies exist on the link between egg consumption and body weight in post-menopausal women, and none of them accounted for genetic weight gain predispositions. Our objective was to examine associations between egg consumption, body weight, and genetic predisposition for an elevated Body Mass Index (BMI), in postmenopausal women.

Methods

We analyzed data from 4439 healthy Women's Health Initiative participants of European descent during a 6-year follow up using multivariable generalized linear mixed models to prospectively evaluate egg and egg-nutrient intake (measured by a food frequency questionnaire) against body weight and a BMI polygenic score (PGS-BMI) derived from GWAS meta-analysis effect-allele frequencies.

Results

We found a positive prospective association between change in egg intake and body weight during the 6-year follow up. For instance, at year 3, women whose intake had increased by 2.0 eggs/week had gained 0.70 kg (95%CI: 0.34, 1.07, p = 0.0002) more than women whose intake had decreased by 2.4 eggs/week, p-linear <0.0001. Cholesterol-intake and choline-intake, but not betaine-intake, showed similar significant associations. Exploratory analysis revealed that: 1) women only demonstrated these significant associations if they exhibited higher intakes of “Western-pattern” foods including processed and red meats, French fries, sweets and deserts, sugar-sweetened beverages, fried foods, and dietary fat, and dietary energy; and 2) there was a significant positive prospective association between PGS-BMI and body-weight change, but only in the top quintile of egg-intake change.

Conclusions

We found significant positive prospective associations between weight change and changes in egg intake, cholesterol intake, and choline intake among healthy postmenopausal women of European ancestry in the Women's Health Initiative. Exploratory analyses revealed that: 1) these significant associations only obtained among women who ate large amounts of “Western-pattern” foods; and 2) women with a higher genetic susceptibility for an elevated BMI gained more weight only if they increased their egg intake considerably. Our results require confirmation.
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来源期刊
Clinical nutrition
Clinical nutrition 医学-营养学
CiteScore
14.10
自引率
6.30%
发文量
356
审稿时长
28 days
期刊介绍: Clinical Nutrition, the official journal of ESPEN, The European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism, is an international journal providing essential scientific information on nutritional and metabolic care and the relationship between nutrition and disease both in the setting of basic science and clinical practice. Published bi-monthly, each issue combines original articles and reviews providing an invaluable reference for any specialist concerned with these fields.
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