Liu Qing, Rossouw Jacques E, Roberts Mary B, Liu Simin, Johnson Karen C, Shikany James M, Manson JoAnn E, Tinker Lesley F, Eaton Charles B
From the aDepartment of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Brown University, Providence, RI; bCenter for Primary Care and Prevention, Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island, Pawtucket, RI; cNational Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, MD; dDepartment of Medicine, Brown University Alpert School of Medicine, Providence, RI; eUniversity of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN; fDivision of Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL; gBrigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; hDivision of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA; and iDepartment of Family Medicine, Brown University Alpert Medical School, Providence, RI.
Epidemiology. 2017 Jan;28(1):145-156. doi: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000000557.
Several recent articles have called into question the deleterious effects of high animal fat diets due to mixed results from epidemiologic studies and the lack of clinical trial evidence in meta-analyses of dietary intervention trials. We were interested in examining the theoretical effects of substituting plant-based fats from different types of margarine for animal-based fat from butter on the risk of atherosclerosis-related cardiovascular disease (CVD).
We prospectively studied 71,410 women, aged 50-79 years, and evaluated their risk for clinical myocardial infarction (MI), total coronary heart disease (CHD), ischemic stroke, and atherosclerosis-related CVD with an average of 13.2 years of follow-up. Butter and margarine intakes were obtained at baseline and year 3 by means of a validated food frequency questionnaire. Cox proportional hazards regression using a cumulative average diet method was used to estimate the theoretical effect of substituting 1 teaspoon/day of three types of margarine for the same amount of butter.
Substituting butter or stick margarine with tub margarine was associated with lower risk of MI (HRs = 0.95 and 0.91). Subgroup analyses, which evaluated these substitutions among participants with a single source of spreadable fat, showed stronger associations for MI (HRs = 0.92 and 0.87). Outcomes of total CHD, ischemic stroke, and atherosclerosis-related CVD showed wide confidence intervals but the same trends as the MI results.
This theoretical dietary substitution analysis suggests that substituting butter and stick margarine with tub margarine when spreadable fats are eaten may be associated with reduced risk of myocardial infarction.
近期的几篇文章对高动物脂肪饮食的有害影响提出了质疑,原因是流行病学研究结果不一,且在饮食干预试验的荟萃分析中缺乏临床试验证据。我们感兴趣的是,研究用不同类型人造黄油中的植物性脂肪替代黄油中的动物性脂肪,对动脉粥样硬化相关心血管疾病(CVD)风险的理论影响。
我们对71410名年龄在50至79岁之间的女性进行了前瞻性研究,平均随访13.2年,评估她们发生临床心肌梗死(MI)、总冠心病(CHD)、缺血性中风和动脉粥样硬化相关CVD的风险。通过经过验证的食物频率问卷在基线和第3年获取黄油和人造黄油的摄入量。使用累积平均饮食法的Cox比例风险回归用于估计用三种类型的人造黄油每天替代1茶匙等量黄油的理论效果。
用人造奶油或块状人造黄油替代黄油与较低的MI风险相关(风险比分别为0.95和0.91)。在单一来源可涂抹脂肪的参与者中评估这些替代物的亚组分析显示,与MI的关联更强(风险比分别为0.92和0.87)。总冠心病、缺血性中风和动脉粥样硬化相关CVD的结果显示出较宽的置信区间,但与MI结果趋势相同。
这项理论性饮食替代分析表明,在食用可涂抹脂肪时,用人造奶油替代黄油和块状人造黄油可能与降低心肌梗死风险有关。