| Literature DB >> 26389950 |
Annunziata D'Alessandro1, Giovanni De Pergola2.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyze the a priori dietary indexes used in the studies that have evaluated the role of the Mediterranean Diet in influencing the risk of developing cardiovascular disease. All the studies show that this dietary pattern protects against cardiovascular disease, but studies show quite different effects on specific conditions such as coronary heart disease or cerebrovascular disease. A priori dietary indexes used to measure dietary exposure imply quantitative and/or qualitative divergences from the traditional Mediterranean Diet of the early 1960s, and, therefore, it is very difficult to compare the results of different studies. Based on real cultural heritage and traditions, we believe that the a priori indexes used to evaluate adherence to the Mediterranean Diet should consider classifying whole grains and refined grains, olive oil and monounsaturated fats, and wine and alcohol differently.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; a priori dietary indexes; cardiovascular disease; cerebrovascular disease; coronary heart disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26389950 PMCID: PMC4586562 DOI: 10.3390/nu7095367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
A priori dietary indexes and main results of the studies that evaluated the relationship between the Mediterranean Diet and CVD, CHD and cerebrovascular disease.
| Authors (Year) (Reference) | Subjects, Number, Age | Study’s Name, Type of Study and Follow-Up | Main Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilenko | MDS | Israeli Jewish population, 1159 adults, ≥35 year | NNS, transverse study | In men for each MDS decrease significant increased risk for MI, CABG, PTCA, CVD. |
| Hoşcan | MDS | Turkish population, 900 adults, 25–70 year | Cohort, (5.1 year) | Men with a lower adherence to the Mediterranean Diet had a significantly higher risk of CHD morbidity compared to men with a higher adherence. No association was found in women. |
| Trichopoulou | t-MED | Greek population, 22,043 adults, 20–86 year | EPIC, cohort, (3.7 year) | A 2-point increase in t-MED is associated with a CHD mortality reduction by 33%. |
| Dilis | t-MED | Greek population, 23,572 adults, 20–86 year | EPIC, cohort, (10 year) | A 2-point increase in t-MED was associated with a decrease in CHD mortality by 22% ( |
| Misirli | t-MED | Greek population, 23,601 adults 20–86 year | EPIC, cohort, (10.6 year) | A 2-point increase in t-MED was associated with a significant decrease in cerebrovascular disease incidence and a non-significant decrease in cerebrovascular disease mortality |
| Tsivgoulis | t-MED | U.S. population, 20,197 adults, 65 ± 9 year | REGARDS, cohort, (6.5 year) | A 1-point increase in t-MED was independently associated with a 5% reduction in the risk of incident ischemic stroke. No association with incident hemorrhagic stroke |
| Martínez-González | t-MED | Spanish population, 13,609 young, mean 38 year | SUN, cohort, (4.9 year) | A 2-point increase in t-MED was associated with a 20% decrease in total CVD risk and to a 26% reduction in CHD risk |
| Gardener | t-MED | U.S. population, 2568 adult, mean 69 ± 10 year | NOMAS, cohort (9 year) | A 1-point increase in t-MED was associated with a 9% ( |
| Agnoli | t-MED | Italian population, 40,681 adults, 35–74 year | EPICOR, cohort , (7.89 year) | t-MED was inversely associated with the risk of ischemic stroke and positively with the risk of hemorrhagic stroke without statistical significance |
| Turati | t-MED | Italian population, 760 patients with a first episode of non-fatal MI/682 controls, 16–79 year | Case-control | A 1-point increase in the t-MED was associated with a reduced risk of a first episode of MI by 9% |
| Knoops | The score according to Knoops | European population (11 European countries), 2339 elderly people, 70–90 year | HALE study, cohort, (10 year) | A score of at least four points reduced the CHD mortality by 39% and the CVD mortality by 29% |
| Agnoli | The Italian Mediterranean Index | Italian population, 40,681 adults, 35–74 year | EPICOR, cohort, (7.89 year) | The Italian Mediterranean Index was inversely associated with ischemic stroke ( |
| Fung | a-MED | U.S. population, 74,886 females nurses, 38–63 year | NHS, cohort, (20 year) | Women in the highest a-MED quintile were at lower risk for both total CHD and total stroke compared with those in the lowest quintile ( |
| Mitrou | a-MED | U.S. population, 380,296 adults, median age 62 year | NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study, cohort (5 year) | The risk of mortality for CVD was lower in men and women with higher adherence to the Mediterranean Diet compared to those with a lower adherence ( |
| Buckland | r-MED | Spanish population, 41,078 adults, 29–69 year | EPIC, cohort, (10.4 year) | A 1-point increase in the r-MED was associated with a 6% lower risk of total CHD ( |
| Hoevenaar-Blom | m-MED | Dutch population, 34,708 adults, 20–70 year | EPIC, cohort, (10–15 year) | A 2-point increase in the m-MED was inversely and significantly associated with fatal CVD, composite CVD, incident MI, incident stroke, and pulmonary embolism |
| Sjögren | The score according to Sjogren | Swedish men, 924 elderly, 71 ± 1 year | Cohort, (10.2 year) | A higher adherence to the Mediterranean Diet was associated with a lower risk of CVD mortality as compared to lower adherence ( |
| Tognon | The score according to Tognon 2012 | Sweden population, 77,151 adults, 30–70 year | VIP, cohort , (median 9 year) | The score according to Tognon 2012 was significantly associated only in women but not in men with mortality for CVD and mortality for MI. No association was found with stroke mortality in both genders. |
| Tognon | The score according to Tognon 2014 | Danish population, 1849 adults | MONICA project, longitudinally | The score according to Tognon 2014 was inversely associated with CVD incidence and mortality. The strength of the associations depended on the way in which the score was built (see text) |
| Panagiotakos | DS | Greek population, 2583 adults, 18–89 year | ATTICA study, cohort, (10 year) | A 1-point increase in the DS decreased CVD risk by 4% |
| Panagiotakos | DS | Greek population, 848 patients with a first symptom of CHD/1078 controls | CARDIO 2000, case-control | An 11/55 unit increase in DS was associated with a reduced odds of having a first acute coronary syndrome by 27% |
| Kastorini | DS | Greek population, 250 patients with a first episode of acute coronary syndrome and 250 patients with a first ischemic stroke/500 controls | Case-control | A 1-point increase in the DS reduced the odds of having acute coronary syndrome by 9% and of having a stroke by 12% |
| Kastorini | DS | Greek population, 250 patients with a first ischemic stroke/250 controls | Case-control | A 1-point increase in DS reduced the odds of having a first ischemic stroke by 17% in non-hypercolesterolemic participants and by 10% in hypercolesterolemic participants |
| Fidanza | MAI | USA, Europe, Japan, 12,763 men, 40–59 year | Seven Countries Study, cohort, (25 year) | The MAI was inversely correlated with death rates from CHD ( |
| Menotti | MAI | Italian population, 1139 men, 45–64 year | Seven Countries Study, two Italian cohorts, (20–40 year) | The hazard ratio for 2.7 units of MAI was associated with a CHD mortality reduction of 26% in 20y and 21% in 40y of follow-up |
| Martínez-González | Spanish population, 171 patients with a first MI/171 controls, <80 year | Case-control | A 1-point increase in the | |
| Estruch | PREDIMED score | Spanish population, 7447 adults, 50–80 year | Randomized trial (4.8 year) | The rate of major CVD events was reduced by 30% ( |
MDS, Mediterranean Diet Score; t-MED, Trichoupoulou Mediterranean Diet Index; a-MED, alternate Mediterranean Diet Index; r-MED, relative Mediterranean Diet Index; m-MED, modified Mediterranean Diet Index; DS, Dietary Score; MAI, Mediterranean Adequacy Index; PREDIMED, PREvencion con DIeta MEDiterranea; NNS, Negev Nutrition Study; EPIC, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; REGARDS, Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke; SUN, Seguimiento Universidad de Navarra; NOMAS, Northern Manhattan Study; HALE, Healthy Ageing: a Longitudinal study in Europe; NHS, Nurses Health Study; NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study, National Institutes of Health-AARP Diet and Health Study; MONICA, MONItoring trends and determinants of CArdiovascular disease. MI, myocardial infarction; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; PTCA, percutaneus transluminal coronary angioplasty; CVD, cardiovascular disease; CHD, coronary heart disease; ° In this study, the food group of cereals was not clearly defined (bread and potatoes); * With the exception of potatoes, the used dietary and t-MED scores had the same components in this study but were built differently.
A priori dietary indexes and studies in which they have been evaluated or used to study the relationship between Mediterranean Diet and CVD, CHD, and cerebrovascular disease.
| Authors (Year) (Reference) | Index Components | Score Range | |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDS | Trichopoulou | MDS | 0–8 |
| 8 components: M/S ratio; cereals (including bread and potatoes); vegetables; fruit; legumes; alcohol; meat and meat products; milk and dairy products | |||
| Other Indexes adapted from the MDS: t-MED | Trichopoulou | t-MED | 0–9 |
| 9 components: M/S ratio; cereals (including bread and potatoes); vegetables; fruit and nuts; legumes; fish; alcohol; meat and meat products; milk and dairy products | |||
| Other indexes adapted from the t-MED | |||
| the score according to Knoops | Knoops | the score according to Knoops | 0–8 |
| 8 components: M/S ratio; legumes, nuts and seeds; cereals; fruits; vegetables and potatoes; fish; meat and meat products; dairy products | |||
| the Italian Mediterranean Index | Agnoli | the Italian Mediterranean Index | 0–11 |
| 11 components: pasta; typical Mediterranean vegetables; fruit; legumes; olive oil; fish; soft drinks; butter; red meat; potatoes; alcohol | |||
| a-MED | Fung | a-MED | 0–9 |
| 9 components: M/S ratio; legumes; fruits; vegetables (excluding potatoes); nuts; whole grains; fish; red and processed meats; alcohol | |||
| r-MED | Buckland | r-MED | 0–18 |
| 9 components: Fruit, nuts, seeds (excluding fruit juices); vegetables (excluding potatoes); legumes; cereals; fish, sea foods; olive oil; meat and meat products, dairy products, alcohol | |||
| m-MED | Trichopoulou | m-MED | 0–9 |
| 9 components: M + P/S ratio; vegetables; legumes; fruit; cereals; fish; meat; dairy products; alcohol | |||
| Other indexes adapted from the m-MED | |||
| the score according to Sjögren | Sjögren | the score according to Sjögren | 0–8 |
| 8 components: P/S ratio; vegetables and legumes, fruit; cereals and potatoes; fish; meat and meat products; milk and milk products; alcohol | |||
| the scores according to Tognon | Tognon | the score according to Tognon (2012) | 0–8 |
| 8 components: M + P/S ratio; vegetables and potatoes; fruit and juices; whole grain cereals; fish and fish products, meat and meat products; dairy products; alcohol | |||
| Tognon | the score according to Tognon (2014) | 0–8 | |
| 8 components: M + P/S ratio; vegetables; fruit; cereal grains; fish and fish products; meat, meat products and eggs; dairy products; alcohol | |||
| DS | Pitsavos | DS | 0–55 |
| 11 components: olive oil; whole grains; fruit; vegetables; potatoes; legumes; fish; meat and meat products; poultry; full fat dairy; alcohol | |||
| MAI | Alberti-Fidanza | MAI | 0.6–11.6 # |
| 18 components: bread; cereals; legumes; potatoes; vegetables; fresh fruit; nuts; fish; wine; vegetable oils; milk; cheese; meat; eggs; animal fat and margarines; sweet beverages; cakes, pies, cookies; sugar | |||
| Martínez-González | 0–40 | ||
| 8 components: olive oil; fiber; fruit; vegetables; fish; alcohol; meat and meat products; bread, pasta and rice | |||
| PREDIMED score | Schröder | PREDIMED score | 0–14 |
| 14-componennts: olive oil; vegetables; fruit (including natural fruit juices); red meat and meat products; animal fats; sugar sweetened beverages; red wine; legumes; fish and shell fish; sweets and pastries; nuts; sofrito; white meat; olive oil as main culinary fat |
MDS, Mediterranean Diet Score; t-MED, Trichoupoulou Mediterranean Diet Index; a-MED, alternate Mediterranean Diet Index; r-MED, relative Mediterranean Diet Index; m-MED, modified Mediterranean Diet Index; DS, Dietary Score; MAI, Mediterranean Adequacy Index; PREDIMED, PREvencion con DIeta MEDiterranea; CVD, cardiovascular disease; CHD, coronary heart disease; M, monounsaturated fat; P, polyunsaturated fat; S, saturated fat; ° In this study, the food group of cereals was not clearly defined (bread and potatoes); * With the exception of potatoes, the used dietary and t-MED scores had the same components in this study but were built differently; # Score range among 16 cohorts of the Seven Countries Study (Fidanza et al.) [32].