The Journal of Nutrition, Health and Aging (Jul 2024)

Dietary habits, lifestyles, and overall adherence to 2018 WCRF/AICR cancer prevention recommendations among adult women in the EPIC-Florence cohort: Changes from adulthood to older age and differences across birth cohorts

  • Saverio Caini,
  • Melania Assedi,
  • Benedetta Bendinelli,
  • Ilaria Ermini,
  • Luigi Facchini,
  • Miriam Fontana,
  • Davide Liedl,
  • Domenico Palli,
  • Elisa Pastore,
  • Andrea Querci,
  • Calogero Saieva,
  • Giovanna Masala

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 7
p. 100242

Abstract

Read online

Objectives, setting and participants: We aimed to examine changes in dietary habits, lifestyles (e.g., smoking, physical activity levels, and alcohol intake), anthropometry, other individual health-relevant characteristics, and overall adherence to 2018 WCRF/AICR cancer prevention recommendations, among women enrolled in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)-Florence cohort. Design and measurements: We fitted age- and energy intake-adjusted generalized linear models to describe (a) changes occurring over a person’s lifetime in the transition from adulthood to older age, and (b) differences between women aged 56−60 years belonging to two birth cohorts spaced apart by around 25 years (born in 1933−1941 vs. 1958−1964). Results: Dietary habits and overall adherence to cancer prevention recommendations improved among women (n = 3,309) followed from adulthood to older age (mean age 47.4 and 71.8 years, respectively), despite increases in the prevalence of adiposity and sedentary lifestyle. Women in the younger birth cohort (n = 163) showed significantly greater overall adherence to cancer prevention recommendations than in the older birth cohort (n = 355), but had more often a positive smoking history and an average larger waist circumference. Conclusion: A trend toward better adherence to cancer prevention recommendations emerged when analyzing adult-to-older-age trajectories and differences across birth cohort, yet some critical issues were also identified. Continuous monitoring is essential to detect changing prevention needs and adapt public health policies and practices.

Keywords