Luxembourg Institute of Health (L.I.H.) (formerly CRP-Santé), Epidemiology and Public Health Research Unit (EPHRU), Strassen, Luxembourg.
Luxembourg Institute of Health (L.I.H.) (formerly CRP-Santé), Epidemiology and Public Health Research Unit (EPHRU), Strassen, Luxembourg.
Clin Nutr. 2017 Oct;36(5):1275-1282. doi: 10.1016/j.clnu.2016.08.013. Epub 2016 Aug 24.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Relationships between food consumption/nutrient intake and tobacco smoking have been described in the literature. However, little is known about the association between smoking and overall diet quality. This study examined the associations between eight diet quality indices, namely, the Diet Quality Index-International (DQI-I), Recommendation Compliance Index (RCI), Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension (DASH) score, Energy Density Score (EDS), Dietary Diversity Score (DDS), Recommended Food Score (RFS), non-Recommended Food Score (non-RFS), and Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII), and smoking status with a focus on smoking intensity.
Analyses were based on a sample of 1352 participants in the Observation of Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Luxembourg (ORISCAV-LUX) survey, a nationwide population-based cross-sectional study of adults aged 18-69 years. Nutritional data from food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) were used to compute selected diet quality indices. Participants were classified as never smoker, former smoker (≥12 months cessation period), occasional or light smokers (≤1 cig/d), moderate smokers (≤20 cig/d) and heavy smokers (>20 cig/d). Descriptive and linear regression analyses were performed, after adjustment for several potential covariates.
Compared to the other groups, heavy smokers had significantly higher prevalence of dyslipidemia (83%), obesity (34%), and elevated glycemic biomarkers. About 50% of former smokers had hypertension. Diet quality of heavy smokers was significantly poorer than those who never smoked independent of several socioeconomic, lifestyle, and biologic confounding factors (all p < 0.001). Heavy smokers were less compliant with national or international dietary recommendations, expressed by RCI, DQI-I, and RFS. In addition, they consumed a more pro-inflammatory diet, as expressed by higher DII scores (P < 0.001) and self-reported less dietary diversity in their food choices, as expressed by DDS.
This study provides new evidence concerning an inverse relationship between the intensity of tobacco consumption and overall diet quality. The implication is that efforts aimed at tobacco control should target heavy smokers and intervention on smoking cessation should take into account diet quality of smokers and their nutritional habits, to increase effectiveness and relevance of public health messages.
文献中描述了食物摄入/营养素摄入与吸烟之间的关系。然而,对于吸烟与整体饮食质量之间的关联知之甚少。本研究检查了 8 种饮食质量指数(即饮食质量指数-国际(DQI-I)、推荐遵守指数(RCI)、停止高血压的饮食方法(DASH)评分、能量密度评分(EDS)、饮食多样性评分(DDS)、推荐食物评分(RFS)、不推荐食物评分(non-RFS)和饮食炎症指数(DII))与吸烟状态之间的关联,重点关注吸烟强度。
分析基于卢森堡观察心血管风险因素(ORISCAV-LUX)调查的 1352 名参与者的样本,这是一项针对 18-69 岁成年人的全国性基于人群的横断面研究。使用来自食物频率问卷(FFQ)的营养数据来计算选定的饮食质量指数。参与者被分为从不吸烟者、前吸烟者(≥12 个月戒烟期)、偶尔或轻度吸烟者(≤1 支/天)、中度吸烟者(≤20 支/天)和重度吸烟者(>20 支/天)。在调整了几个潜在的混杂因素后,进行了描述性和线性回归分析。
与其他组相比,重度吸烟者的血脂异常(83%)、肥胖(34%)和升高的血糖生物标志物的患病率明显更高。大约 50%的前吸烟者患有高血压。重度吸烟者的饮食质量明显差于从不吸烟的人,这与几个社会经济、生活方式和生物学混杂因素无关(均 P<0.001)。重度吸烟者对国家或国际饮食建议的遵守程度较差,这表现在 RCI、DQI-I 和 RFS 中。此外,他们的饮食更具炎症性,表现在更高的 DII 评分(P<0.001)和他们报告的食物选择中更少的饮食多样性,表现在 DDS 中。
本研究提供了关于烟草消费强度与整体饮食质量之间的反比关系的新证据。这意味着,旨在控制烟草的努力应该针对重度吸烟者,而戒烟干预措施应该考虑到吸烟者的饮食质量及其营养习惯,以提高公共卫生信息的有效性和相关性。