Saul A, Taylor B V, Blizzard L, Simpson-Yap S, Oddy W H, Probst Y C, Black L J, Ponsonby A L, Broadley S A, Lechner-Scott J, van der Mei I
Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia.
Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia; Melbourne School of Population & Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Mult Scler Relat Disord. 2023 Oct;78:104925. doi: 10.1016/j.msard.2023.104925. Epub 2023 Jul 29.
The influence of diet quality on multiple sclerosis (MS) progression or inflammatory activity is not well understood.
Study participants with MS from the AusLong cohort, were followed annually (10 years, n = 223 post-onset). At baseline, 5 and 10-year reviews, indices of dietary quality - the Australian Recommended Food Score (ARFS) and Diet Quality Tracker (DQT) - were calculated from self-reported dietary intake data of the preceding 12 months (Food Frequency Questionnaire, Dietary Questionnaire for Epidemiological Studies v2). Associations were examined between measures of dietary quality with measures of MS progression and inflammatory activity hazard of relapse, annualised disability progression (Expanded Disability Status Scale, EDSS) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) outcomes. MRI outcomes included fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR, T2 MRI) lesion volume and black hole volume (T1 MRI) in the juxtacortical, periventricular, and infratentorial regions of the brain, as well as total calculated from the sum of the three regions.
A higher diet quality (at least with the ARFS) was associated with lower FLAIR lesion volume in the periventricular region only (highest vs lowest quartile: β=-1.89,95%CI=-3.64, -0.13, p = 0.04, periventricular FLAIR region median (IQR) for 5-year review: 4.41 (6.06) and 10-year review: 4.68 (7.27)). Associations with black hole lesion volume, hazard of relapse, and annualised EDSS progression, lacked in significance and/or dose-dependency.
We found evidence that diet quality may have a role in modulating one aspect of MS inflammatory activity (periventricular MRI FLAIR lesion volume), but not other MRI and clinical outcome measures.
饮食质量对多发性硬化症(MS)进展或炎症活动的影响尚未完全明确。
对来自AusLong队列的MS研究参与者进行年度随访(为期10年,发病后n = 223例)。在基线、5年和10年复查时,根据前12个月的自我报告饮食摄入数据(食物频率问卷、流行病学研究饮食问卷v2)计算饮食质量指标——澳大利亚推荐食物评分(ARFS)和饮食质量追踪器(DQT)。研究饮食质量指标与MS进展指标以及复发的炎症活动风险、年化残疾进展(扩展残疾状态量表,EDSS)和磁共振成像(MRI)结果之间的关联。MRI结果包括脑皮质旁、脑室周围和幕下区域的液体衰减反转恢复(FLAIR,T2 MRI)病变体积和黑洞体积(T1 MRI),以及这三个区域总和计算得出的总体积。
更高的饮食质量(至少与ARFS相关)仅与脑室周围区域较低的FLAIR病变体积相关(最高四分位数与最低四分位数相比:β=-1.89,95%CI=-3.64,-0.13,p = 0.04,脑室周围FLAIR区域5年复查的中位数(IQR):4.41(6.06),10年复查:4.68(7.27))。与黑洞病变体积、复发风险和年化EDSS进展的关联缺乏显著性和/或剂量依赖性。
我们发现证据表明饮食质量可能在调节MS炎症活动的一个方面(脑室周围MRI FLAIR病变体积)发挥作用,但对其他MRI和临床结果指标无作用。