Nutrients (Nov 2022)

Genetic Predisposition, Fruit Intake and Incident Stroke: A Prospective Chinese Cohort Study

  • Jun Wang,
  • Jianxin Li,
  • Fangchao Liu,
  • Keyong Huang,
  • Xueli Yang,
  • Xiaoqing Liu,
  • Jie Cao,
  • Shufeng Chen,
  • Chong Shen,
  • Ling Yu,
  • Fanghong Lu,
  • Liancheng Zhao,
  • Ying Li,
  • Dongsheng Hu,
  • Jianfeng Huang,
  • Dongfeng Gu,
  • Xiangfeng Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14235056
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 23
p. 5056

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the association between fruit intake and stroke risk considering the genetic predisposition. We used data from 34,871 participants from the project of Prediction for Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Risk in China (China-PAR project) from 2007 to 2020. A polygenic risk score comprising 534 genetic variants associated with stroke and its related factors was constructed to categorize individuals into low, intermediate, and high genetic risk groups. The associations of genetic and fruit intake with incident stroke were assessed by the Cox proportional hazard regression. We documented 2586 incident strokes during a median follow-up of 11.2 years. Compared with fruit intake 100 g/day across the genetic risk categories were observed (28–32%), but the absolute risk reductions were relatively larger in the highest genetic risk group (p for trend = 0.03). In comparison to those with a fruit intake 100 g/day in the low, intermediate, and high genetic risk groups had an average of 1.45 (95% CI, 0.61–2.31), 2.12 (1.63–2.59), and 2.19 (1.13–3.22) additional stroke-free years at aged 35, respectively. Our findings suggest that individuals with a high genetic risk could gain more absolute risk reductions and stroke-free years than those with a low genetic risk from increasing fruit intake for the stroke primary prevention.

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