医学
危险系数
背景(考古学)
内科学
混淆
队列
队列研究
前瞻性队列研究
死因
2型糖尿病
糖尿病
疾病
人口学
置信区间
内分泌学
古生物学
生物
社会学
作者
Ana García‐Arellano,Miguel Ángel Martínez‐González,Raúl Ramallal,Jordi Salas‐Salvadó,James R. Hébert,Dolores Corella,Nitin Shivappa,Luis Forga,Helmut Schröder,Carlos Muñoz-Bravo,Ramón Estruch,Miquel Fiol,José Lapetra,Lluís Serra‐Majem,Emilio Ros,Javier Rekondo,Estefanía Toledo,Cristina Razquín,Miguel Ruiz‐Canela,Álvaro Alonso
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.clnu.2018.05.003
摘要
Inflammation is known to be related to the leading causes of death including cardiovascular disease, several types of cancer, obesity, type 2 diabetes, depression-suicide and other chronic diseases. In the context of whole dietary patterns, the Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII®) was developed to appraise the inflammatory potential of the diet.We prospectively assessed the association between DII scores and all-cause mortality in two large Spanish cohorts and valuated the consistency of findings across these two cohorts and results published based on other cohorts.We assessed 18,566 participants in the "Seguimiento Universidad de Navarra" (SUN) cohort followed-up during 188,891 person-years and 6790 participants in the "PREvencion con DIeta MEDiterránea" (PREDIMED) randomized trial representing 30,233 person-years of follow-up. DII scores were calculated in both cohorts from validated FFQs. Higher DII scores corresponded to more proinflammatory diets. A total of 230 and 302 deaths occurred in SUN and PREDIMED, respectively. In a random-effect meta-analysis we included 12 prospective studies (SUN, PREDIMED and 10 additional studies) that assessed the association between DII scores and all-cause mortality.After adjusting for a wide array of potential confounders, the comparison between extreme quartiles of the DII showed a positive and significant association with all-cause mortality in both the SUN (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.85; 95% CI: 1.15, 2.98; P-trend = 0.004) and the PREDIMED cohort (HR = 1.42; 95% CI: 1.00, 2.02; P-trend = 0.009). In the meta-analysis of 12 cohorts, the DII was significantly associated with an increase of 23% in all-cause mortality (95% CI: 16%-32%, for the highest vs lowest category of DII).Our results provide strong and consistent support for the hypothesis that a pro-inflammatory diet is associated with increased all-cause mortality. The SUN cohort and PREDIMED trial were registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02669602 and at isrctn.com as ISRCTN35739639, respectively.
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