Nutrients (Feb 2024)

A Plant-Based Cholesterol-Lowering Diet Score Correlates with Serum LDL-Cholesterol Levels

  • Jerry Polesel,
  • Matteo Di Maso,
  • Giovanna Esposito,
  • Sara Vitale,
  • Elvira Palumbo,
  • Giuseppe Porciello,
  • Ilaria Calabrese,
  • Anita Minopoli,
  • Bruna Grilli,
  • Ernesta Cavalcanti,
  • Diego Serraino,
  • Egidio Celentano,
  • David J. A. Jenkins,
  • Livia S. A. Augustin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16040495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. 495

Abstract

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Background: A cholesterol-lowering diet score was previously developed for epidemiological studies; its association with serum lipid profile was not confirmed yet. Methods: The score was developed as an adaptation of the dietary portfolio for cholesterol reduction, assigning one point for adherence to seven dietary indicators and ranging from 0 (null adherence) to 7 (highest adherence). The score was calculated for breast cancer patients enrolled in the DEDiCa study using a 7-day food record; serum lipid profile, including total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), was evaluated in serum at baseline. Results: Patients with the highest adherence to the cholesterol-lowering diet (i.e., score ≥ 4) reported lower LDL-C level than women with score 0–1 (median: 107 mg/dL and 122 mg/dL, respectively; p < 0.01). The proportion of women with LDL-C above the recommended limit of 116 mg/dL was 60.0% with score 0–1 and 42.6% with score ≥4. Although the score directly correlates with consumption of foods from vegetal sources, it was mildly associated with the healthful plant-based diet index (r-Spearman = 0.51) and the Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener (r-Spearman = 0.30) Conclusions: These results provide experimental evidence that the cholesterol-lowering diet score is capable of detecting a specific plant-based dietary pattern that affects circulating cholesterol levels.

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