Université Paris-Saclay, AgroParisTech, INRAE, UMR PNCA, 16 rue Claude Bernard, 75005, Paris, France.
Risk Assessment Department, Methodology and Survey Unit, French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety (ANSES), 14 rue Pierre et Marie Curie, 94701, Maisons-Alfort Cedex, France.
Eur J Nutr. 2021 Oct;60(7):4055-4067. doi: 10.1007/s00394-021-02576-2. Epub 2021 May 8.
While the consumption of ultra-processed foods is steadily increasing, there is a growing interest in more sustainable diets that would include more plant protein. We aimed to study associations between the degree of food processing, patterns of protein intake, diet quality and cardiometabolic risk.
Using the NOVA classification, we assessed the proportion of energy from unprocessed/minimally processed foods (MPFp), processed foods (PFp) and ultra-processed foods (UPFp) in the diets of 1774 adults (18-79 years) from the latest cross-sectional French national survey (INCA3, 2014-2015). We studied the associations between MPFp, PFp and UPFp with protein intakes, diet quality (using the PANDiet scoring system, the global (PDI), healthful (hPDI) and unhealthful (uPDI) plant-based diet indices) and risk of cardiometabolic death (using the EpiDiet model).
MPFp was positively associated with animal protein intake and plant protein diversity, whereas PFp was positively associated with plant protein intake and negatively with plant protein diversity. The PANDiet was positively associated with MPFp (β = 0.14, P < 0.0001) but negatively with UPFp (β = - 0.05, P < 0.0001). These associations were modified by adjustment for protein intakes and plant protein diversity. As estimated with comparative risk assessment modeling between extreme tertiles of intake, mortality from cardiometabolic diseases would be decreased with higher MPFp (e.g. by 31% for ischemic heart diseases) and increased with higher UPFp (by 42%) and PFp (by 11%).
In the French population, in contrast with UPFp, higher MPFp was associated with higher animal protein intake, better plant protein diversity, higher diet quality and markedly lower cardiometabolic risk.
随着超加工食品的消费稳步增加,人们对更可持续的饮食越来越感兴趣,这种饮食将包含更多的植物蛋白。我们旨在研究食品加工程度、蛋白质摄入模式、饮食质量和心血管代谢风险之间的关联。
使用 NOVA 分类法,我们评估了 1774 名成年人(18-79 岁)饮食中未加工/最低限度加工食品(MPFp)、加工食品(PFp)和超加工食品(UPFp)的能量比例(最新的法国全国横断面调查 INCA3,2014-2015 年)。我们研究了 MPFp、PFp 和 UPFp 与蛋白质摄入、饮食质量(使用 PANDiet 评分系统、整体(PDI)、健康(hPDI)和不健康(uPDI)植物性饮食指数)和心血管代谢死亡风险(使用 EpiDiet 模型)之间的关系。
MPFp 与动物蛋白摄入和植物蛋白多样性呈正相关,而 PFp 与植物蛋白摄入呈正相关,与植物蛋白多样性呈负相关。PANDiet 与 MPFp 呈正相关(β=0.14,P<0.0001),与 UPFp 呈负相关(β=-0.05,P<0.0001)。这些关联在调整蛋白质摄入量和植物蛋白多样性后发生了变化。根据极端三分位摄入的比较风险评估模型估计,较高的 MPFp(例如,缺血性心脏病降低 31%)和较高的 UPFp(增加 42%)和 PFp(增加 11%)可降低心血管代谢疾病的死亡率。
在法国人群中,与 UPFp 相反,较高的 MPFp 与较高的动物蛋白摄入、更好的植物蛋白多样性、更高的饮食质量和明显更低的心血管代谢风险相关。