School of Family and Consumer Sciences, Nutrition and Foods, Texas State University, San Marcos, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute for Health Promotion Research, UT Health San Antonio, San Antonio, USA.
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2019 Jan;173(1):145-154. doi: 10.1007/s10549-018-4982-9. Epub 2018 Sep 26.
The goal of this education and culinary-based dietary intervention was to increase adherence to a Mediterranean-style, anti-inflammatory dietary pattern in breast cancer survivors (BCS) by promoting the consumption of anti-inflammatory foods, herbs, and spices.
Overweight and obese, early-stage, BCS were randomized to the Intervention (n = 76) or Control (n = 77). The 6-month intervention included monthly nutrition and cooking workshops, Motivational Interviewing telephone calls, and individualized newsletters. Control participants received monthly informational brochures and no navigational services. Dietary intakes were collected via questionnaire and 3-day food records at baseline and 6 months.
One hundred twenty-five BCS (n = 60 I; n = 65 C) completed post-testing (81.7%) and were included in analyses. Adherence to Mediterranean diet guidelines significantly increased in the intervention group, but not in the control group (+ 22.5% vs. + 2.7%, P < 0.001). Upon further analysis of adherence to individual dietary guidelines, the intervention group significantly improved adherence to only three guidelines: consuming ≥ 3 servings of fish or shellfish/week, reducing red meat intake to < 1 serving/day, and limiting consumption of commercial sweets and baked goods to < 3 times/week. The intervention arm increased the use of spices and herbs compared to control (+ 146.2% vs. +33.3%, P < 0.001), including significantly more frequent consumption of cinnamon, turmeric, garlic, ginger, black pepper, and rosemary.
An education and culinary-based intervention in BCS successfully increased adherence to a more Mediterranean-style, anti-inflammatory dietary pattern by increasing the consumption of anti-inflammatory foods, spices, and herbs and decreasing the consumption of pro-inflammatory foods.
本教育和以烹饪为基础的饮食干预旨在通过促进抗炎食物、草药和香料的摄入,提高乳腺癌幸存者(BCS)对地中海式抗炎饮食模式的依从性。
超重和肥胖、早期阶段的 BCS 被随机分为干预组(n=76)和对照组(n=77)。为期 6 个月的干预措施包括每月的营养和烹饪研讨会、动机访谈电话咨询以及个性化通讯。对照组参与者每月接受信息小册子,不提供导航服务。在基线和 6 个月时通过问卷和 3 天食物记录收集饮食摄入量。
125 名 BCS(n=60 名干预组;n=65 名对照组)完成了测试(81.7%),并纳入分析。干预组对地中海饮食指南的依从性显著增加,但对照组没有(+22.5%对+2.7%,P<0.001)。进一步分析对个别饮食指南的依从性时,干预组仅在以下三个方面显著改善了依从性:每周至少食用 3 份鱼类或贝类、将红肉摄入量减少到每天不超过 1 份、限制商业甜食和烘焙食品的摄入量每周不超过 3 次。与对照组相比,干预组增加了香料和草药的使用(+146.2%对+33.3%,P<0.001),包括更频繁地食用肉桂、姜黄、大蒜、生姜、黑胡椒和迷迭香。
对 BCS 的教育和以烹饪为基础的干预成功地通过增加抗炎食物、香料和草药的摄入,减少促炎食物的摄入,增加了对更具地中海式抗炎饮食模式的依从性。