Article (Scientific journals)
Association of diet quality indices with serum and metabolic biomarkers in participants of the ORISCAV-LUX-2 study.
Vahid, Farhad; Hoge, Axelle; Hébert, James R et al.
2023In European Journal of Nutrition
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Keywords :
Chronic disease risk; Diet quality scores; Dietary patterns; Inflammation; Non-communicable diseases; Oxidative stress; Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII); Type 2 diabetes; Medicine (miscellaneous); Nutrition and Dietetics
Abstract :
[en] [en] PURPOSE: Diet quality is a critical modifiable factor related to health, including the risk of cardiometabolic complications. Rather than assessing the intake of individual food items, it is more meaningful to examine overall dietary patterns. This study investigated the adherence to common dietary indices and their association with serum/metabolic parameters of disease risk. METHODS: Dietary intakes of the general adult population (n = 1404, 25-79 years) were assessed by a validated food-frequency questionnaire (174 items). The French ANSES-Ciqual food composition database was used to compute nutrient intakes. Seven indicators were calculated to investigate participants' diet quality: the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI), Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension Score (DASH-S), Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS), Diet Quality Index-International (DQI-I), Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII), Dietary Antioxidant Index (DAI), and Naturally Nutrient-Rich Score (NNRS). Various serum/metabolic parameters were used in the validity and association analyses, including markers of inflammation, blood glucose, and blood lipid status. RESULTS: Following linear regression models adjusted for confounders, the DASH-S was significantly associated with most metabolic parameters (14, e.g., inversely with blood pressure, triglycerides, urinary sodium, uric acid, and positively with serum vitamin D), followed by the DQI-I (13, e.g., total cholesterol, apo-A/B, uric acid, and blood pressure) and the AHEI (11, e.g., apo-A, uric acid, serum vitamin D, diastolic blood pressure and vascular age). CONCLUSION: Food-group-based indices, including DASH-S, DQI-I, and AHEI, were good predictors for serum/metabolic parameters, while nutrient-based indices, such as the DAI or NNRS, were less related to biological markers and, thus, less suitable to reflect diet quality in a general population.
Disciplines :
Public health, health care sciences & services
Author, co-author :
Vahid, Farhad;  Nutrition and Health Research Group, Department of Precision Health, Luxembourg Institute of Health, rue 1 A-B Thomas Edison, 1445, Strassen, Luxembourg
Hoge, Axelle ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences de la santé publique
Hébert, James R;  South Carolina Statewide Cancer Prevention and Control Program and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA ; Department of Nutrition, Connecting Health Innovations LLC (CHI), Columbia, SC, USA
Bohn, Torsten ;  Nutrition and Health Research Group, Department of Precision Health, Luxembourg Institute of Health, rue 1 A-B Thomas Edison, 1445, Strassen, Luxembourg. Torsten.bohn@lih.lu
ORISCAV working group*.
Language :
English
Title :
Association of diet quality indices with serum and metabolic biomarkers in participants of the ORISCAV-LUX-2 study.
Publication date :
14 March 2023
Journal title :
European Journal of Nutrition
ISSN :
1436-6207
eISSN :
1436-6215
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, Germany
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Funding text :
The ORISCAV-LUX 2 data collection was funded by the LIH (Ministry of Higher Education and internal research funding).
Available on ORBi :
since 28 March 2023

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