Nutrients (Nov 2023)

Association between Total Dietary Phytochemical Intake and Cardiometabolic Health Outcomes—Results from a 10-Year Follow-Up on a Middle-Aged Cohort Population

  • Magda Gamba,
  • Octavio Pano,
  • Peter Francis Raguindin,
  • Zayne M. Roa-Diaz,
  • Taulant Muka,
  • Marija Glisic,
  • Oscar H. Franco,
  • Pedro Marques-Vidal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15224793
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 22
p. 4793

Abstract

Read online

Dietary phytochemical intake associations with cardiovascular health and mortality remain unknown. We studied the relations between total dietary phytochemical intake and cardiovascular health outcomes in a middle-aged Swiss population. We analyzed data spanning 2009 to 2021 from a prospective cohort study in Lausanne, Switzerland, including 3721 participants (54.8% women, 57.2 ± 10.3 years) without cardiovascular disease (CVD) history. Dietary intake was assessed using a validated self-reported food frequency questionnaire. The Dietary Phytochemical Index (DPI) and the healthy Dietary Phytochemical Index (hDPI) were calculated as the total energy intake percentage obtained from phytochemical-rich food consumption. The Healthy Plant-Based Diet Index (hPBD) was estimated by scoring healthy plant foods positively and less-healthy plant foods negatively. Indices tertiles and cardiometabolic outcome associations were determined using Cox proportional hazard models. Over 30,217 person-years of follow-up, 262 CVD events, and 178 deaths occurred. Unadjusted analyses found 36%, 33%, and 32% lower CVD risk for the highest hDPI, DPI, and hPBD tertiles, respectively. After adjustment, only the second hDPI tertile showed a 30% lower CVD risk (HR 0.70, 95% CI 0.51–0.95; P for trend 0.362). No other associations emerged. In this middle-aged Swiss cohort, no associations between dietary indices reflecting a phytochemical-rich dietary pattern and incident CVD, all-cause, or CVD mortality were observed.

Keywords