| Literature DB >> 26695408 |
Catherine M Milte1, Sarah A McNaughton2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Nutrition is a key determinant of chronic disease in later life. A systematic review was conducted of studies examining dietary patterns and quality of life, physical function, cognitive function and mental health among older adults.Entities:
Keywords: Ageing; Diet; Dietary patterns; Epidemiology; Health
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26695408 PMCID: PMC4767865 DOI: 10.1007/s00394-015-1123-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nutr ISSN: 1436-6207 Impact factor: 5.614
Fig. 1Flow chart summary of articles identified in search and included in review
Characteristics of selected studies on dietary indices and measures of successful ageing
| Reference, country, study name | Design (CS/P/L) | Sample size (% women) | Participants; age, years (mean ± SD) | Follow-up (years) | Dietary intake assessment, index | Outcome | Adjustmentsa | Results | Risk of biasb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| Ford et al. [ | CS | 4009 (57 %) | >74 (81.5 ± 4.4) | N/A | Dietary screening tool | HALex | A, G, H, S, self- versus proxy-report | HALex scores were significantly lower for ‘unhealthy’ and ‘borderline’ dietary scores compared to ‘healthy’ dietary score | Mod |
| Gopinath et al. [ | P, L | 1305 (59.2 %) | >55 (mean ~67) | 5 | 145-item FFQ, modified Australian DQI | SF-36 | A, G, S, H | DQI positively associated with vitality, physical function, physical function and physical composite score | Mod |
| Woo et al. [ | CS | 3611 (51.2 %) | ≥65 (72.52 ± 5.21) | N/A | 266-item FFQ, DQI-I | SF-12 (MCS and PCS) | A, G | DQI-I associated with mental and physical health status | High |
| Kimura et al. [ | CS | 689 (58 %) | ≥65 (75.7 ± 7.3) | N/A | Food diversity: FDSK-11 | QoL visual analogue scale | A | High food diversity group reported higher QoL on subjective health, family relationship, friend relationship and subjective happiness | High |
| Haveman-Nies et al. [ | L | 480 (55 %) | 70–75 (men 72.6 ± 1.6, women 72.7 ± 1.7) | 10 | Modified DH, MDS | Self-rated health status | A, S | No associations between diet quality and health status | High |
|
| |||||||||
| Shikany et al. [ | P, L | 5922 (0 %) | Men ≥65 (mean ~75) | 4.6 | 69-item FFQ, DQI-R | CHS Frailty Index | A, Race, S, H, E | DQI-R was inversely associated with frailty status at baseline and follow-up | Mod |
| León-Muñoz et al. [ | P, L | 1815 (~60 %) | ≥60 (mean ~68.5) | 3.5 | DH, MEDAS and MDS | CHS Frailty Index | A, G, S, H, E | Highest MEDAS score tertile associated with lower risk of frailty compared to lowest tertile. MDS associated with progressively reduced risk of frailty | Mod |
| Gopinath et al. [ | P, L | 895 (58.2 %) | >55 (mean ~71) | 5 | 145-item FFQ, Modified Australian DQI | The Older American Resources and Services ADL scale | A, G, S, H | Risk of incident IADL at follow-up lowest in highest quartile baseline total diet score | Mod |
| Bollwein et al. [ | CS | 192 (64 %) | ≥75 (83 ± 4) | N/A | 103-item FFQ, MED score | CHS Frailty Index | A, G, S, H, E | Risk of being frail reduced in highest quartile of MED score. Linear trend in OR, indicative of a graded effect for diet. Lower MED score associated with weight loss, low physical activity and low walking speed | High |
| Milaneschi et al. [ | P, L | 935 (55.6 %) | ≥65 (74.1 ± 6.8) | 9 | 47-item FFQ, MDS | SPPB | A, G, E, H | Higher MDS associated with better function, less decline in SPPB score and lower risk of developing new mobility disability | Mod |
| Woo et al. [ | CS | 3611 (51.2 %) | ≥65 (72.52 ± 5.21) | N/A | 266-item FFQ, DQI-I | Frailty index | A, G | DQI-I associated with frailty | High |
| Kimura et al. [ | CS | 689 (58 %) | ≥65 (75.7 ± 7.3) | N/A | Food diversity: FDSK-11 | Basic ADL and advanced ADL on Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology Index of Competence rating scale | A | High food diversity group reported better basic ADL and better advanced ADL | High |
| Haveman-Nies et al. [ | L | 480 (55 %) | 70–75 (men 72.6 ± 1.6, women 72.7 ± 1.7) | 10 | Modified DH, MDS | Self-care ability | A, S | No associations between diet quality and self-care ability observed | High |
|
| |||||||||
| Wengreen et al. [ | P, L | 3580 (57.1 %) | ≥65 (mean ~74) | 11 | 142-item FFQ, DASH and MDS | 3MS | A, G, S, H | Higher DASH and MDS associated with higher levels of cognitive function over 11 years | Low |
| Chan et al. [ | CS | 3670 (47.5 %) | ≥65 | N/A | 280-item FFQ, MDS | CSI-D | A, H, E, S | No association with MDS and risk of cognitive impairment in men or women | Mod |
| Katsiardanis et al. [ | CS | 557 (57 %) | ≥65 | N/A | 157-item FFQ, MedDietScore | MMSE | A, S, H | MedDietScore positively associated with MMSE in men. MedDietScore negatively associated with MMSE in women | Mod |
| Kesse-Guyot et al. [ | P, L | 3083 (46.3 %) | ≥45 (52.0 ± 4.6) | 13 | 6 × 1-day DR, MDS and MSDPS | Global cognitive function (R1-48 cued recall (episodic memory), 2 × verbal fluency tasks (lexical semantic memory), forward and backward digit span (short-term and working memory), Delis–Kaplan trail-making test (metal flexibility) | A, G, S, H, E, I, follow-up time, number of FR | No association with global cognitive function. Minor associations between MDS and digit span and MSDPS and phonemic fluency performance | High |
| Ye et al. [ | CS | 1269 (% women not reported) | Puerto Rican 45–75 (57.3 ± 7.6) | N/A | FFQ, MDS and HEI 2005 | Cognitive function (neuropsychological test battery and MMSE) and presence of cognitive impairment | A, G, S, H | Higher MDS and HEI 2005 associated with higher MMSE and lower odds of cognitive impairment | Mod |
| Shatenstein et al. [ | P, L | 1488 (52.6 %) | 67–84 (men 74.05 ± 4.09, women 74.36 ± 4.21) | 3 | 78-item FFQ, C-HEI | 3MS | A, G, S, H | Overall C-HEI score and some subscores associated with baseline 3MS in univariate analysis. C-HEI not associated with cognition in multivariate analysis | Mod |
| Vercambre et al. [ | L | 2504 (100 %) | Women ≥65 (range 66.1–91.2) with prevalent CVD or risk factors | 5.4 | 116-item FFQ, MDS | Cognitive function (TICS, East Boston Memory Test, category fluency) | A, S, E, H, I | MDS not related to cognitive decline | Mod |
| Tangney et al. [ | P, L | 3790 (61.7 %) | ≥65 (75.4 ± 6.2) | 7.6 | Modified Harvard 139-item FFQ, MedDiet and HEI-2005 | Global cognitive function (East Boston immediate and delayed recall; MMSE; symbol digit and modalities test) | A, G, S, cognitive activity, E (for MedDiet) | Med Diet associated with slower rate of cognitive decline. No association with HEI-2005 | Mod |
| Feart et al. [ | P, L | 1410 (63 %) | ≥65 (67.7–94.9) | 5 | FFQ, MDS | Cognitive function (MMSE, Isaacs Set Test, Benton Visual Retention Test, Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test) | S, E, H, APOE genotype | Higher MDS associated with fewer MMSE errors. No other associations in the whole cohort. In individuals without dementia over the 5 years, higher MDS was associated with better performance on the MMSE and Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test | Mod |
| Wengreen et al. [ | P, L | 3634 (55–59 %) | ≥65 (mean ~74) | 11 | 142-item FFQ, RFS and Non-RFS | 3MS | A, S, G, APOE genotype, H, E | Higher RFS associated with higher 3MS at baseline, and less decline in 3MS scores over 11 y. No relationship with Non-RFS | Mod |
| Nicolas et al. [ | P, L | 96 (76 %) | ≥55 (76.2 ± 5.9) | 4 | 3-day DR, HDI | Cognitive function (MMSE, WAIS symbol digit modalities task, timed cancellation task) | Nonec | Higher HDI in 1993 associated with better MMSE and timed cancellation task. No association with current HDI and cognitive function | High |
| Huijbregts et al. [ | CS | 1049 (0 %) | Men 70–91 (mean ~76) | N/A | DH, HDI | MMSE | A, S, H, E | A higher HDI score associated with reduced odds of cognitive impairment (statistically significant in Crevalcore cohort only) | Mod |
|
| |||||||||
| Skarupski et al. [ | P, L | 3502 (59 %) | ≥65 (73.5 ± 6.1) | 7.2 | 69-item FFQ, MedDietScore | CES-D | A, G, Race, S, E, H | MedDietScore inversely associated with risk of developing depressive symptoms | Mod |
| Hodge et al. [ | P, L | 8660 (~61.8 %) | 50–69 (mean ~59) | 12 | 121-item FFQ, MDS | K10 | A, G, S, H, E | MDS inversely associated with psychological distress. Australian-style pattern also inversely associated with psychological distress | Mod |
| Jacka et al. [ | CS | 5731 (56.8 %) | 46–49 and 70–74 | N/A | 169-item FFQ, a priori diet quality score | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | A, S, H, E | Diet quality was inversely related to depression in men. Diet quality was inversely related to depression and anxiety n women | Mod |
| Kimura et al. [ | CS | 689 (58 %) | ≥65 (75.7 ± 7.3) | N/A | Food diversity: FDSK-11 | GDS-15 | A | High food diversity group reported lower depression scores (4.1 + 3.8 vs. 6.2 + 4.3), | High |
ADL activities of daily living, BMES The Blue Mountains Eye Study, CES-D Centre for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale, CCMS Cache Country Study on Memory and Ageing in Utah, CHAP Chicago Health and Aging Project, C-HEI Canadian Healthy Eating Index, CHS Cardiovascular Health Study, CS Cross-Sectional, CSI-D Community Screening Instrument for Dementia, DASH Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension, DH Diet History, DQI-I Diet Quality Index-International, DQI-R Diet Quality Index-Revised, DR Diet Records, FDSK-11 11-item Food Diversity Score Kyoto, FFQ Food Frequency Questionnaire, GDS Geriatric Depression Scale, HALex Health and Activity Limitation Index, HDI Healthy Diet Indicator, HEI 2005 Healthy Eating Index 2005, K10 Kessler Psychological Distress Scale, L longitudinal, MCS Mental Component Summary, MCCS Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study, MDS Mediterranean Diet Score, MedDietScore Mediterranean Diet Score, MED score Alternate Mediterranean Food Score, MEDAS Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener, MrOS Osteoporotic Fractures in Men, MSDPS Mediterranean-Style Dietary Pattern Score, MMSE Mini–Mental State Examination, P prospective, QoL quality of life, RFS Recommended Food Score, SD standard deviation, SENECA Survey in Europe on Nutrition and the Elderly, SF-12 12-item Short-Form Health Survey, SPPB Short Physical Performance Battery, SU.VI.MAX 2 Supplémentation en Vitamines et Minéraux 2 study, TICS Telephone Interview of Cognitive Status, WACS Women’s Antioxidant Cardiovascular Study, WAIS Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, 3MS Modified Mini–Mental State Examination
aAdjusted for: A, age; G, gender; S, sociodemographics; H, health-related variables; E, total energy intake; I, intervention group
bAssessed by Effective Public Health Project Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies: Low, low risk of bias; Mod, moderate risk of bias; High, high risk of bias
cA, S and E were investigated; however, no adjustments used due to lack of consistent effects
Characteristics of selected studies on data-driven methods and successful ageing
| Reference, country, study name | Design (CS/P/L) | Sample size (% women) | Age, years (mean ± SD) | Follow-up (years) | Diet intake assessment, pattern analysis (input) | Outcome | Adjustmentsb | Results | Risk of biasc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| Samieri et al. [ | CS | 1724 (62 %) | ≥65 (76.8 ± 5.10) | N/A | 148-item FFQ, cluster analysis (20 food groups) | Self-rated health | A, S | Men: 5 clusters ‘small eaters’, ‘biscuits and snacking’, ‘healthy’, ‘charcuterie, meat, alcohol’, ‘pasta eaters’. ‘Pasta eaters’ more likely to report impaired health. Women: 5 clusters ‘small eaters’, ‘biscuits and snacking’, ‘healthy’, ‘charcuterie, starchy foods’, ‘pizza, sandwich’. ‘Biscuits and snacking’ more likely to report impaired health | Low |
|
| |||||||||
| Parrott et al. [ | P, L | 1099 (49.4 %) | 68–84 (mean ~74) | 3 | 78-item FFQ, PCA (78 foods) | 3MS | A, G, H, S, E | Two patterns: ‘prudent’ and ‘western’. Prudent pattern associated with higher 3MS scores at recruitment in the upper categories of income, education, or composite SEP, and with less cognitive decline for low composite SEP only. Western pattern associated with greater cognitive decline for low educational attainment only | Mod |
| Kesse-Guyot et al. [ | P, L | 2983 (N/A) | 45–60 (65.5 ± 45 at follow-up) | 13.6 | Multiple 24-h DR (bimonthly), RRR (30 food groups) | Global cognitive function (R1-48 cued recall (episodic memory), 2 × verbal fluency tasks (lexical semantic memory), forward and backward digit span (short-term and working memory), Delis–Kaplan trail-making test (metal flexibility) | A, G, H, I, S, E, time | One pattern: ‘carotenoid-rich dietary pattern’. Dietary pattern positively associated with composite cognitive score, and scores for the cued recall task, backward digit span task, trail-making test and fluency task | Mod |
| Corley et al. [ | CS | 878 (~50 %) | ~70 (69.5 ± 0.8) | N/A | 168-item FFQ, PCA (168 foods) | Moray House Test (age 11 and 70), WAIS cognitive subtests, MMSE | A, G, S | Four patterns: ‘Mediterranean-style’, ‘health aware’, ‘traditional’ and ‘sweet foods’. Mediterranean and traditional patterns associated with better cognitive performance at old age. After adjusting for childhood IQ and SEP, statistical significance was lost for most associations excluding verbal ability for both patterns | High |
| Chan et al. [ | CS | 3670 (47.5 %) | ≥65 | N/A | 280-item FFQ, factor analysis (32 food groups) | CSI-D | A, H, E, S | Three patterns: ‘vegetable–fruits’, ‘snacks–drinks–milk products’ and ‘meat–fish’. Men: No dietary patterns associated with risk of cognitive impairment. Women: ‘vegetable–fruits’ and ‘snacks–drinks–milk products’ patterns associated with reduced risk of cognitive impairment | Mod |
| Kesse-Guyot et al. [ | P, L | 3054 (~45 %) | ≥45 years | 13 | 6 × 1-day DR over 2 years, PCA (34 food groups) | Cognitive function: language and verbal memory (R1-48 cued recall, verbal fluency tasks), executive functioning (forward and backward digit span, Delis-Kaplan trail-making test) | A, G, S, I, E, H, | 2 patterns: ‘healthy’, ‘traditional’ Healthy pattern associated with better cognitive function and verbal memory | High |
| Akbaraly et al. [ | CS | 4693 (26.2 %) | White European ≥52 (mean ~61) | N/A | 127-item FFQ, PCA (37 food groups) | Cognitive function (20-word free-recall test of short-term verbal memory, AH4-I verbal and mathematical reasoning, Mill Hill Vocabulary test, phonemic verbal fluency, semantic verbal fluency) | A, G, S, E, H | Two patterns: ‘whole food’ and ‘processed food’. Whole food diet associated with lower odds of cognitive deficit on all five tests. Processed food diet associated with higher odds of cognitive deficit for all tests except memory | Mod |
| Samieri et al. [ | CS | 1724 (62 %) | ≥65 (76.0 ± 4.97) | N/A | 148-item FFQ, cluster analysis (20 food groups) | MMSE | A, S | Men: 5 clusters ‘small eaters’, ‘biscuits and snacking’, ‘healthy’, ‘charcuterie, meat, alcohol’ and ‘pasta eaters’. Women: 5 clusters ‘small eaters’, ‘biscuits and snacking’, ‘healthy’, charcuterie, starchy foods’ and ‘pizza sandwich’. Lower number of errors on MMSE in ‘healthy’ cluster in both sexes | Low |
|
| |||||||||
| Chan et al. [ | P, L | 2902 (~40 %) | ≥65 (mean ~72) | 4 | 280-item FFQ, factor analysis (32 food groups) | GDS | A, G, E, H, S | Three patterns: ‘vegetable–fruits’, ‘snacks–drinks–milk products’ and ‘meat–fish’. Inverse association with GDS and the ‘vegetable–fruits’ and ‘snacks–drinks–milk products’ patterns at baseline. No association with dietary patterns at 4 years | Mod |
| Hodge et al. [ | P, L | 8660 (~61.8 %) | 50–69 (mean ~59) | 12 | 121-item FFQ, PCA | K10 | A, G, S, H, E | Two patterns: ‘modified Mediterranean’ and ‘Australian’. Australian-style pattern inversely associated with psychological distress | Mod |
| Rienks et al. [ | P, L | 8369 CS, 7588 L (100 %) | Women 50–55 (52.5 ± 1.5) | 3 | 101-item FFQ, factor analysis (101 food groups) | CES-D (2001 and 2004) | S, E, H | 6 patterns: ‘cooked vegetables’, ‘fruit’, ‘Mediterranean-style’, ‘meat and processed meat’, ‘dairy’ and ‘high fat and sugar’. Mediterranean diet associated with lower depressive symptoms (NS after controlling for confounders) | Low |
| Le Port et al. [ | P, L | 12,404 (25 %) | 45–60 (men 45 ± 2.9, women 42.2 ± 4.2) | 10 | 35-item FFQ, PCA (35 foods) | CES-D | A, S, H | Men: 5 patterns ‘low fat’, ‘healthy diet’, ‘western diet’, ‘fat-sweet’ and ‘high snacking’. Healthy diet associated with reduced likelihood of depressive symptoms. Low fat, western, fat-sweet and snacking diets were associated with increased likelihood of depressive symptoms. Women: 6 patterns ‘low fat’, ‘healthy diet’, ‘traditional diet’, ‘animal protein pattern’, ‘high dessert’ and ‘high snacking’. Healthy diet and traditional diet associated with reduced likelihood of depressive symptoms. Low fat and snacking diets were associated with increased likelihood of depressive symptoms | Mod |
| Jacka et al. [ | CS | 5731 (56.8 %) | 46–49 and 70–74 | N/A | 169-item FFQ, PCA | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | A, S, H, E | Three patterns: ‘healthy’, ‘western’ and ‘traditional (Norwegian)’ Men: A traditional diet was associated with less likelihood of depression. A healthy diet was associated with increased likelihood of anxiety. Women: A healthy diet was associated with less likelihood of depression. A healthy diet and traditional diet were associated with reduced likelihood of anxiety | Mod |
| Akbaraly et al. [ | P | 3486 (26.2 %) | White European ≥47 (mean 55.6) | 5 | 127-item FFQ, PCA (37 food groups) | CES-D | A, G, S, E, H | Two patterns: ‘whole food’ and ‘processed food’. Intake of whole food pattern associated with lower odds of depression. Intake of processed food pattern associated with increased depression | Mod |
| Samieri et al. [ | CS | 1724 (62 %) | ≥65 (76.0 ± 4.97) | N/A | 148-item FFQ, cluster analysis (20 food groups) | CES-D | A, S | Men: 5 clusters ‘small eaters’, ‘biscuits and snacking’, ‘healthy’, ‘charcuterie, meat, alcohol’ and ‘pasta eaters’. CES-D scores higher in ‘pasta eaters’ cluster. Women: 5 clusters ‘small eaters’, ‘biscuits and snacking’, ‘healthy’, charcuterie, starchy foods’ and ‘pizza sandwich’. No significant relationships in adjusted model | Low |
There were no studies examining frailty or physical function
ALSWH Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health, CES-D Centre for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale, CS cross-sectional, CSI-D Community Screening Instrument for Dementia, DR diet record, FFQ Food Frequency Questionnaire, GDS Geriatric Depression Scale, K10 Kessler Psychological Distress Scale, L longitudinal, MCCS Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study, MDS Mediterranean Diet Score, MMSE Mini–Mental state Examination, P prospective, PCA principle component analysis, RRR reduced rank regression, SD standard deviation, SEP socioeconomic position, SU.VI.MAX 2 Supplémentation en Vitamines et Minéraux 2 study, WAIS Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, 3MS Modified Mini–Mental State Examination
aAdjusted for: A, age; G, gender; S, sociodemographics; H, health-related variables; E, total energy intake; I, intervention group
bAssessed by Effective Public Health Project Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies: Low, low risk of bias; Mod, moderate risk of bias; High, high risk of bias