Alkerwi Ala'a, Vernier Cédric, Crichton Georgina E, Sauvageot Nicolas, Shivappa Nitin, Hébert James R
Centre de Recherche Public de la Santé, Centre d'Etudes en Santé,1A rue Thomas Edison,StrassenL-1445,Luxembourg.
Cancer Prevention and Control Program, University of South Carolina,Columbia,SC29208,USA.
Br J Nutr. 2015 Jan 28;113(2):259-69. doi: 10.1017/S0007114514003456. Epub 2014 Dec 5.
The scientific community has become increasingly interested in the overall quality of diets rather than in single food-based or single nutrient-based approaches to examine diet-disease relationships. Despite the plethora of indices used to measure diet quality, there still exist questions as to which of these can best predict health outcomes. The present study aimed to compare the ability of five diet quality indices, namely the Recommendation Compliance Index (RCI), Diet Quality Index-International (DQI-I), Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH), Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS), and Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII), to detect changes in chronic disease risk biomarkers. Nutritional data from 1352 participants, aged 18-69 years, of the Luxembourg nationwide cross-sectional ORISCAV-LUX (Observation of Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Luxembourg) study, 2007-8, were used to calculate adherence to the diet quality index. General linear modelling was performed to assess trends in biomarkers according to adherence to different dietary patterns, after adjustment for age, sex, education level, smoking status, physical activity and energy intake. Among the five selected diet quality indices, the MDS exhibited the best ability to detect changes in numerous risk markers and was significantly associated with lower levels of LDL-cholesterol, apo B, diastolic blood pressure, renal function indicators (creatinine and uric acid) and liver enzymes (serum γ-glutamyl-transpeptidase and glutamate-pyruvate transaminase). Compared with other dietary patterns, higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet is associated with a favourable cardiometabolic, hepatic and renal risk profile. Diets congruent with current universally accepted guidelines may be insufficient to prevent chronic diseases. Clinicians and public health decision makers should be aware of needs to improve the current dietary guidelines.
科学界对饮食的整体质量越来越感兴趣,而非采用基于单一食物或单一营养素的方法来研究饮食与疾病的关系。尽管用于衡量饮食质量的指标众多,但对于其中哪些指标能最准确地预测健康结果仍存在疑问。本研究旨在比较五个饮食质量指标,即推荐依从指数(RCI)、国际饮食质量指数(DQI-I)、终止高血压饮食方法(DASH)、地中海饮食评分(MDS)和饮食炎症指数(DII),检测慢性病风险生物标志物变化的能力。利用2007 - 2008年卢森堡全国性横断面ORISCAV-LUX(卢森堡心血管危险因素观察)研究中1352名年龄在18 - 69岁参与者的营养数据,计算对饮食质量指数的依从性。在调整年龄、性别、教育水平、吸烟状况、身体活动和能量摄入后,采用一般线性模型根据对不同饮食模式的依从性评估生物标志物的变化趋势。在所选的五个饮食质量指标中,MDS在检测众多风险标志物变化方面表现出最佳能力,并且与较低水平的低密度脂蛋白胆固醇、载脂蛋白B、舒张压、肾功能指标(肌酐和尿酸)以及肝酶(血清γ-谷氨酰转肽酶和谷丙转氨酶)显著相关。与其他饮食模式相比,更高程度地依从地中海饮食与有利的心脏代谢、肝脏和肾脏风险状况相关。符合当前普遍接受指南的饮食可能不足以预防慢性病。临床医生和公共卫生决策者应意识到改进当前饮食指南的必要性。