| Literature DB >> 19549997 |
Antonia Trichopoulou1, Christina Bamia, Dimitrios Trichopoulos.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relative importance of the individual components of the Mediterranean diet in generating the inverse association of increased adherence to this diet and overall mortality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19549997 PMCID: PMC3272659 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.b2337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Distribution of study participants without cancer, coronary heart disease, or diabetes mellitus at enrolment, by sex and baseline sociodemographic, somatometric, lifestyle, and medical characteristics. Values are numbers (percentages)
| Characteristic | Men (n=9504) | Women (n=13 845) | Total (n=23 349) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years): | |||
| <45 | 3 479 (37) | 4 521 (33) | 8 000 (34) |
| 45-54 | 2 361 (25) | 3 402 (25) | 5 763 (25) |
| 55-64 | 1 923 (20) | 3 338 (24) | 5 261 (23) |
| ≥65 | 1 741 (18) | 2 584 (19) | 4 325 (19) |
| Education: | |||
| None/elementary school degree | 4 471 (47) | 8 295 (60) | 12 766 (55) |
| Secondary/technical school degree | 2 994 (32) | 3 247 (23) | 6 241 (27) |
| University degree/higher | 2 039 (21) | 2 303 (17) | 4 342 (19) |
| Smoking of cigarettes (at enrolment): | |||
| Current | 3 904 (41) | 2 543 (18) | 6 447 (28) |
| Former | 2 964 (31) | 1 101 (8) | 4 065 (17) |
| Never | 2 636 (28) | 10 201 (74) | 12 837 (55) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2): | |||
| ≤25 | 1 897 (20) | 3 545 (26) | 5 442 (23) |
| >25-<30 | 5 006 (53) | 5 152 (37) | 10 158 (44) |
| ≥30 | 2 601 (27) | 5 148 (37) | 7 749 (33) |
| Waist:hip ratio: | |||
| ≤0.90 | 2 082 (22) | 11 948 (86) | 14 030 (60) |
| >0.90-<0.95 | 2 694 (28) | 1 155 (8) | 3 849 (16) |
| ≥0.95 | 4 728 (50) | 742 (5) | 5 470 (23) |
| Physical activity (MET-hours/day): | |||
| <34.996 | 5 109 (54) | 6 567 (47) | 11 676 (50) |
| ≥34.996 | 4 395 (46) | 7 278 (53) | 11 673 (50) |
| Ethanol intake*: | |||
| Low | 4 484 (47) | 10 900 (79) | 15 384 (66) |
| Moderate | 4 200 (44) | 2 731 (20) | 6 931 (30) |
| High | 820 (9) | 214 (2) | 1 034 (4) |
*Low: <10 g/day for men, <5 g/day for women; moderate: men ≥10 g/day and ≤50 g/day, women ≥5 g/day and ≤25 g/day; high: >50 g/day for men, >25 g/day for women.
Daily intakes (g/day) of indicated dietary variables by sex. Values are median (interquartile range)
| Dietary variable | Men | Women |
|---|---|---|
| Vegetables | 548.60 (434.67-683.86) | 499.33 (388.98-634.26) |
| Legumes | 9.13 (5.75-13.32) | 6.66 (3.62-10.52) |
| Fruits and nuts | 362.52 (257.17-483.60) | 356.77 (257.15-471.46) |
| Cereals | 178.32 (135.24-232.98) | 139.59 (108.06-176.22) |
| Fish and seafood | 23.67 (13.92-33.62) | 18.89 (12.51-27.73) |
| Dairy products | 196.11 (116.90-301.35) | 191.41 (110.76-292.55) |
| Meat and meat products | 121.11 (86.83-163.69) | 89.88 (64.02-120.09) |
| Monounsaturated lipids | 56.04 (44.67-69.45) | 46.62 (36.92-57.86) |
| Saturated lipids | 33.08 (25.19-42.06) | 27.11 (20.62-34.83) |
| Monounsaturated/saturated lipids (ratio) | 1.72 (1.46-2.02) | 1.74 (1.45-2.07) |
| Ethanol | 11.07 (3.43-25.41) | 1.17 (0.04-4.02) |
Mutually adjusted mortality ratios associated with intake of components of Mediterranean diet
| Dietary variable | Mortality ratio* (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|
| Vegetables: | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 0.901 (0.775 to 1.048) | 0.177 |
| Legumes: | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 0.942 (0.825 to 1.076) | 0.379 |
| Fruits and nuts: | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 0.931 (0.816 to 1.061) | 0.284 |
| Cereals: | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 0.989 (0.862 to 1.133) | 0.869 |
| Fish and seafood | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 1.078 (0.950 to 1.224) | 0.243 |
| Monounsaturated/saturated lipids (ratio): | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 0.908 (0.792 to 1.042) | 0.171 |
| Dairy products: | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 1.069 (0.931 to 1.227) | 0.345 |
| Meat and meat products: | ||
| <Median | Reference | |
| ≥Median | 1.148 (0.992 to 1.329) | 0.063 |
| Ethanol intake†: | ||
| Moderate | Reference | |
| Low intake | 1.193 (1.032 to 1.380) | 0.017 |
| High intake | 1.470 (1.132 to 1.907) | 0.004 |
*Adjusted for sex, age (<45, 45-54, 55-64, ≥65, categorically), education (none/elementary school degree, secondary or technical school degree, university degree or higher, categorically), smoking status (never, former, and current at enrolment with cigarettes per day 1-10, 11-20, 21-30, 31-40, ≥41 ordered), waist:hip ratio (sex specific fifths, ordered), body mass index (sex specific fifths, ordered), MET score (fifths, ordered), and total energy intake (fifths, ordered).
†Low: <10 g/day for men, <5 g/day for women; moderate: men ≥10 g/day and ≤50 g/day, women ≥5 g/day and ≤25 g/day; high: >50 g/day for men, >25 g/day for women.
Mortality ratios associated with two unit increment* in Mediterranean diet score (MDS) and after alternate subtraction of each of its dietary components
| Dietary variable | Mortality ratio† (95% CI) | P value | Reduction in apparent effect (%)‡ |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDS overall | 0.864 (0.802 to 0.932) | <0.001 | 0 |
| MDS minus vegetables | 0.886 (0.822 to 0.955) | 0.002 | 16.2 |
| MDS minus legumes | 0.877 (0.815 to 0.944) | <0.001 | 9.7 |
| MDS minus fruit and nuts | 0.879 (0.818 to 0.946) | 0.001 | 11.2 |
| MDS minus cereals | 0.872 (0.814 to 0.935) | <0.001 | 6.1 |
| MDS minus monounsaturated/saturated lipids (ratio) | 0.878 (0.806 to 0.957) | 0.003 | 10.6 |
| MDS minus dairy products | 0.870 (0.806 to 0.939) | <0.001 | 4.5 |
| MDS minus meat and meat products | 0.887 (0.825 to 0.953) | 0.001 | 16.6 |
| MDS minus ethanol | 0.896 (0.835 to 0.962) | 0.002 | 23.5 |
*Originally estimated logarithms of mortality ratios were multiplied by 9/10 and then exponentiated to correct for nine point scale.
†Adjusted for sex, age (<45, 45-54, 55-64, ≥65, categorically), education (none/elementary school degree, secondary or technical school degree, university degree or higher, categorically), smoking status (never, former, and current at enrolment with cigarettes per day 1-10, 11-20, 21-30, 31-40, ≥41 ordered), waist:hip ratio (sex specific fifths, ordered), body mass index (sex specific fifths, ordered), MET score (fifths, ordered), total energy intake (fifths, ordered), and corresponding subtracted components (
‡Estimated from original numbers.
Mortality ratios associated with two unit increment in Mediterranean diet score after successive removal of each of its components
| Dietary variable | Mortality ratio* (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|
| Mediterranean diet score overall | 0.864 (0.802 to 0.932) | <0.001 |
| Minus ethanol | 0.896† (0.835 to 0.962) | 0.002 |
| And minus meat and meat products | 0.919‡ (0.859 to 0.983) | 0.014 |
| And minus vegetables | 0.945§ (0.884 to 1.009) | 0.091 |
| And minus fruit and nuts | 0.959¶ (0.903 to 1.020) | 0.181 |
| And minus monounsaturated/saturated lipids (ratio) | 0.986** (0.922 to 1.054) | 0.678 |
| And minus legumes | 1.001†† (0.942 to 1.063) | 0.985 |
*Adjusted for sex, age (<45, 45-54, 55-64, ≥65, categorically), education (none/elementary school degree, secondary or technical school degree, university degree or higher, categorically), smoking status (never, former, and current at enrolment with cigarettes per day 1-10, 11-20, 21-30, 31-40, ≥41 ordered), waist:hip ratio (sex specific fifths, ordered), body mass index (sex specific fifths, ordered), MET score (fifths, ordered), total energy intake (fifths, ordered), and all dietary components that have been removed (
†Originally estimated logarithm of mortality ratio was multiplied by 9/10 and then exponentiated to adjust to 10 point scale.
‡Originally estimated logarithm of mortality ratio was multiplied by 8/10 and then exponentiated to adjust to 10 point scale.
§Originally estimated logarithm of mortality ratio was multiplied by 7/10 and then exponentiated to adjust to 10 point scale.
¶Originally estimated logarithm of mortality ratio was multiplied by 6/10 and then exponentiated to adjust to 10 point scale.
**Originally estimated logarithm of mortality ratio was multiplied by 5/10 and then exponentiated to adjust to 10 point scale.
††Originally estimated logarithm of mortality ratio was multiplied by 4/10 and then exponentiated to adjust to 10 point scale.