(1)Department of Nutritional Sciences, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taipei, Taiwan.
(2)Department of Medical Research, Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation, Hualien, Taiwan.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2021 Apr;121(4):669-677.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2020.11.003. Epub 2020 Dec 11.
Cataracts are caused by oxidative stress in the lens of the eyes and plant-based dietary patterns can contain a wide variety of protective antioxidants. However, strict vegetarians with inadequate vitamin B-12 intakes can have elevated homocysteine levels, which could increase the risk of cortical cataracts. Whether the benefits of a vegetarian diet outweigh its risks in the development of cataracts warrants investigation.
Our aim was to study the prospective association between a Taiwanese vegetarian dietary pattern and cataract risk.
This was a prospective cohort study.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: The Tzu Chi Health Study recruited 6,002 participants from 2007 to 2009 at Dalin Tzu Chi Hospital. Diet was assessed through a validated food frequency questionnaire. Participants 40 years and older and without cataracts at recruitment (3,095 nonvegetarians and 1,341 vegetarians) were followed until the end of 2014, death, or occurrence of cataracts.
Cataract incident cases ((International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification code 366) were identified by linkage to the National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan.
Cox proportional hazard regression with age as the underlying scale was used to estimate the association between dietary patterns and cataract risk while adjusting for potential confounders.
Compared with nonvegetarians, vegetarians had higher intakes of soy, vegetables, nuts, whole grains, dietary fiber, vitamin C, folate, and vitamin A equivalent. In the 25,103 person-years of follow-up, 476 incident cases of cataracts were identified. A vegetarian diet was associated with a 20% reduced risk of cataracts (hazard ratio 0.80, 95% CI 0.65 to 0.99; P = 0.04) after adjusting for sex, education, smoking, alcohol drinking habits, physical activities, Tzu Chi volunteer status, hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, corticosteroid prescription, and body mass index (calculated as kg/m). This association was more pronounced among individuals with overweight (defined as body mass index ≥24 in Taiwan [hazard ratio 0.70, 95% CI 0.50 to 0.99; P = 0.04]).
A vegetarian diet was associated with a lower risk of cataracts, particularly in study participants with overweight.
白内障是由眼睛晶状体中的氧化应激引起的,而植物性饮食模式可以包含多种保护性抗氧化剂。然而,维生素 B-12 摄入量不足的严格素食者可能会出现同型半胱氨酸水平升高,这可能会增加皮质性白内障的风险。素食饮食在白内障发展中的益处是否超过其风险,这值得研究。
我们旨在研究台湾素食饮食模式与白内障风险之间的前瞻性关联。
这是一项前瞻性队列研究。
参与者/设置:慈济健康研究于 2007 年至 2009 年在大林慈济医院招募了 6002 名参与者。通过验证后的食物频率问卷评估饮食。招募时年龄在 40 岁及以上且无白内障的参与者(3095 名非素食者和 1341 名素食者)随访至 2014 年底、死亡或发生白内障。
白内障发病病例(国际疾病分类,第 9 版临床修订版代码 366)通过与台湾国家健康保险研究数据库的链接确定。
使用 Cox 比例风险回归,年龄作为基础尺度,调整潜在混杂因素后,估计饮食模式与白内障风险之间的关联。
与非素食者相比,素食者摄入更多的大豆、蔬菜、坚果、全谷物、膳食纤维、维生素 C、叶酸和维生素 A 当量。在 25103 人年的随访中,共发现 476 例白内障发病病例。调整性别、教育程度、吸烟、饮酒习惯、体力活动、慈济志愿者身份、高血压、糖尿病、高脂血症、皮质类固醇处方和体重指数(以千克/米计算)后,素食饮食与白内障风险降低 20%相关(风险比 0.80,95%CI 0.65 至 0.99;P=0.04)。这种关联在超重人群中更为明显(定义为台湾体重指数≥24[风险比 0.70,95%CI 0.50 至 0.99;P=0.04])。
素食饮食与白内障风险降低相关,尤其是在超重的研究参与者中。