Bamia Christina, Trichopoulos Dimitrios, Ferrari Pietro, Overvad Kim, Bjerregaard Lone, Tjønneland Anne, Halkjaer Jytte, Clavel-Chapelon Françoise, Kesse Emmanuelle, Boutron-Ruault Marie-Christine, Boffetta Paolo, Nagel Gabriele, Linseisen Jacob, Boeing Heiner, Hoffmann Kurt, Kasapa Christina, Orfanou Anastasia, Travezea Chrysoula, Slimani Nadia, Norat Teresa, Palli Domenico, Pala Valeria, Panico Salvatore, Tumino Rosario, Sacerdote Carlotta, Bueno-de-Mesquita H Bas, Waijers Patricia M C M, Peeters Petra H M, van der Schouw Yvonne T, Berenguer Antonio, Martinez-Garcia Carmen, Navarro Carmen, Barricarte Aurelio, Dorronsoro Miren, Berglund Göran, Wirfält Elisabet, Johansson Ingegerd, Johansson Gerd, Bingham Sheila, Khaw Kay-Tee, Spencer Elizabeth A, Key Tim, Riboli Elio, Trichopoulou Antonia
Department of Hygiene and Epidemiology, University of Athens, Medical School, 75 Mikras Asias Street, 115 27 Athens, Greece.
Public Health Nutr. 2007 Jun;10(6):590-8. doi: 10.1017/S1368980007382487. Epub 2007 Mar 5.
To investigate the association of a posteriori dietary patterns with overall survival of older Europeans.
This is a multi-centre cohort study. Cox regression analysis was used to investigate the association of the prevailing, a posteriori-derived, plant-based dietary pattern with all-cause mortality in a population of subjects who were 60 years or older at recruitment to the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC-Elderly cohort). Analyses controlled for all known potential risk factors.
In total, 74,607 men and women, 60 years or older at enrolment and without previous coronary heart disease, stroke or cancer, with complete information about dietary intakes and potentially confounding variables, and with known survival status as of December 2003, were included in the analysis.
An increase in the score which measures the adherence to the plant-based diet was associated with a lower overall mortality, a one standard deviation increment corresponding to a statistically significant reduction of 14% (95% confidence interval 5-23%). In country-specific analyses the apparent association was stronger in Greece, Spain, Denmark and The Netherlands, and absent in the UK and Germany.
Greater adherence to the plant-based diet that was defined a posteriori in this population of European elders is associated with lower all-cause mortality. This dietary score is moderately positively correlated with the Modified Mediterranean Diet Score that has been constructed a priori and was also shown to be beneficial for the survival of the same EPIC-Elderly cohort.
研究事后确定的饮食模式与欧洲老年人总体生存率之间的关联。
这是一项多中心队列研究。在欧洲癌症与营养前瞻性调查(EPIC-老年队列)招募时年龄在60岁及以上的人群中,采用Cox回归分析来研究流行的、事后得出的、以植物为基础的饮食模式与全因死亡率之间的关联。分析对所有已知的潜在风险因素进行了控制。
共有74607名男性和女性纳入分析,他们在入组时年龄在60岁及以上,无既往冠心病、中风或癌症史,有关于饮食摄入量和潜在混杂变量的完整信息,并且截至2003年12月已知生存状态。
衡量对以植物为基础饮食依从性的得分增加与总体死亡率降低相关,一个标准差的增加对应于统计学上显著降低14%(95%置信区间5%-23%)。在特定国家的分析中,这种明显的关联在希腊、西班牙、丹麦和荷兰更强,而在英国和德国则不存在。
在这群欧洲老年人中,对事后确定的以植物为基础饮食的更高依从性与更低的全因死亡率相关。该饮食得分与事先构建的改良地中海饮食得分呈中度正相关,并且也被证明对同一EPIC-老年队列的生存有益。