Nutrition and Health Research Group, Department of Precision Health, Luxembourg Institute of Health, Strassen, Luxembourg.
Food Funct. 2024 May 20;15(10):5510-5526. doi: 10.1039/d3fo05648a.
This investigation assessed associations between dietary carotenoid intake and the odds of overweight/obesity, as well as inflammatory/oxidative stress biomarkers, in 851 participants with overweight/obesity (BMI ≥25 kg m) and 754 normal-weight controls. A 124-item food-frequency-questionnaire (FFQ) and food composition databases were employed to estimate carotenoid intake. Binary logistic regressions assessed the association of carotenoid intake with the odds of overweight/obesity, adjusting for several potential confounders. Multiple linear regression models revealed associations between carotenoid intake and biomarkers (anthropometrics, blood lipids, inflammation, antioxidant status). Logistic regression models adjusted for various confounders and fruits and vegetables showed protective associations for provitamin A carotenoids (, β-carotene + α-carotene + β-cryptoxanthin; odds ratio (OR): 0.655, = 0.041) and astaxanthin (OR: 0.859, = 0.017). Similarly adjusted multiple linear regressions revealed significant associations between several carotenoids and lower levels of interleukin (IL)-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α and increased IL-10 and total antioxidant capacity. Further analysis revealed that lycopene was significantly associated with increased odds of overweight/obesity (OR: 1.595, = 0.032) in a model adjusted for various confounders and vegetables (, unadjusted for fruits). A protective association between the sum of provitamin A carotenoid and astaxanthin dietary intake and the odds of having overweight/obesity was found. The findings that carotenoids other than lycopene were not or inversely associated with the odds of overweight/obesity may point toward differentiating effects of various carotenoids or their associations with different food groups. Provitamin A rich food items including fruits and vegetables appear to be a prudent strategy to reduce inflammation and the odds of having overweight/obesity.
本研究评估了饮食中叶黄素摄入量与超重/肥胖几率的相关性,以及超重/肥胖(BMI≥25kg/m2)的 851 名参与者和正常体重对照 754 名参与者的炎症/氧化应激生物标志物之间的相关性。采用 124 项食物频率问卷(FFQ)和食物成分数据库来估计类胡萝卜素摄入量。二元逻辑回归评估了类胡萝卜素摄入量与超重/肥胖几率的相关性,同时调整了多个潜在混杂因素。多元线性回归模型揭示了类胡萝卜素摄入量与生物标志物(人体测量学、血脂、炎症、抗氧化状态)之间的相关性。调整了各种混杂因素和水果和蔬菜的逻辑回归模型显示,维生素 A 前体类胡萝卜素(β-胡萝卜素+α-胡萝卜素+β-隐黄质)和虾青素(OR:0.655,p=0.041)具有保护作用,(OR:0.859,p=0.017)。同样调整后的多元线性回归模型显示,几种类胡萝卜素与较低水平的白细胞介素(IL)-6、IL-1β 和 TNF-α 以及较高水平的 IL-10 和总抗氧化能力呈显著相关性。进一步分析显示,在调整了各种混杂因素和蔬菜(未调整水果)的模型中,番茄红素与超重/肥胖几率增加显著相关(OR:1.595,p=0.032)。发现富含维生素 A 的类胡萝卜素和虾青素的膳食摄入量与超重/肥胖几率呈保护相关性。发现除了番茄红素以外的类胡萝卜素与超重/肥胖几率无相关性或呈负相关性,这可能表明了各种类胡萝卜素的作用存在差异,或者它们与不同的食物组有关。富含维生素 A 的食物,包括水果和蔬菜,似乎是减少炎症和超重/肥胖几率的明智策略。