940 results on '"Vioque,J"'
Search Results
2. Association between type 2 diabetes and depressive symptoms after a 1-year follow-up in an older adult Mediterranean population
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Baenas, I., Camacho-Barcia, L., Granero, R., Razquin, C., Corella, D., Gómez-Martínez, C., Castañer-Niño, O., Martínez, J. A., Alonso-Gómez, Á. M., Wärnberg, J., Vioque, J., Romaguera, D., López-Miranda, J., Estruch, R., Tinahones, F. J., Lapetra, J., Serra-Majem, J. L., Cano-Ibáñez, N., Tur, J. A., Martín-Sánchez, V., Pintó, X., Gaforio, J. J., Matía-Martín, P., Vidal, J., Vázquez, C., Daimiel, L., Ros, E., Jiménez-Murcia, S., Dalsgaard, S., Garcia-Arellano, A., Babio, N., Sorli, J. V., Lassale, C., García-de-la-Hera, M., Gómez-García, E., Zulet, M. A., Konieczna, J., Martín-Peláez, S., Tojal-Sierra, L., Basterra-Gortari, F. J., de las Heras-Delgado, S., Portoles, O., Muñoz-Pérez, M. Á., Arenas-Larriva, A. P., Compañ-Gabucio, L., Eguaras, S., Shyam, S., Fitó, M., Baños, R. M., Salas-Salvadó, J., and Fernández-Aranda, F.
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- 2024
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3. Intensive Weight-Loss Lifestyle Intervention Using Mediterranean Diet and COVID-19 Risk in Older Adults: Secondary Analysis of PREDIMED-Plus Trial
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Shyam, Sangeetha, García-Gavilán, J. F., Paz-Graniel, I., Gaforio, J. J., Martínez-González, M. Á., Corella, D., Martínez, J. A., Alonso-Gómez, Á. M., Wärnberg, J., Vioque, J., Romaguera, D., López-Miranda, J., Estruch, R., Tinahones, F. J., Lapetra, J., Serra-Majem, J. L., Bueno-Cavanillas, A., Tur, J. A., Sánchez, V. Martín, Pintó, X., Matía-Martín, P., Vidal, J., del Mar Alcarria, M., Daimiel, L., Ros, E., Fernandez-Aranda, F., Nishi, S. K., García-Regata, Ó., Araluce, R. Perez, Asensio, E. M., Castañer, O., Garcia-Rios, A., Oncina-Cánovas, A., Bouzas, C., Zulet, M. A., Rayó, E., Casas, R., Martin-Pelaez, S., Tojal-Sierra, L., Bernal-López, M. R., Carlos, S., Sorlí, J. V., Goday, A., Peña-Orihuela, P. J., Pastor-Morel, A., Eguaras, S., Zomeño, M. D., Delgado-Rodríguez, M., Babio, N., Fitó, M., and Salas-Salvadó, Jordi
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- 2023
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4. Impact of mediterranean diet promotion on environmental sustainability: a longitudinal analysis
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Álvarez-Álvarez, L., Vitelli-Storelli, F., Rubín-García, M., García, S., Bouzas, C., Ruíz-Canela, M., Corella, D., Salas-Salvadó, J., Fitó, M., Martínez, J.A., Tojal-Sierra, L., Wärnberg, J., Vioque, J., Romaguera, D., López-Miranda, J., Estruch, R., Tinahones, F.J., Santos-Lozano, J.M., Serra-Majem, L., Bueno-Cavanillas, A., García-Fernández, C., Esteve-Luque, V., Delgado-Rodríguez, M., Torrego-Ellacuría, M., Vidal, J., Prieto, L., Daimiel, L., Casas, R., García Arellano, A., Shyam, S., González, J.I., Castañer, O., García-Rios, A., Ortiz Díaz, F., Fernández, A.C., Sánchez-Villegas, A., Morey, M., Cano-Ibañez, N., Sorto-Sánchez, C., Bernal-López, M.R., Bes-Rastrollo, M., Nishi, S.K., Coltell, O., Zomeño, M.D., Peña-Orihuela, P.J., Aparicio, D.V., Zulet, M.A., Vázquez, Z., Babio, N., Pérez, K.A., Tur, J.A., and Martín-Sánchez, V.
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- 2024
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5. Association between mediterranean diet and metal(loid) exposure in 4-5-year-old children living in Spain.
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Notario-Barandiaran, L., Irizar, A., Begoña-Zubero, M., Soler-Blasco, R., Riutort-Mayol, G., Fernández-Somoano, A., Tardón, A., Casas, M., Vrijheid, M., Meharg, A., Carey, M., Meharg, C., Ralphs, K., McCreanor, C., Grimalt, J.O., Vioque, J., and Signes-Pastor, A.J.
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- 2023
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6. Stable periodic oscillations in simple parallel-plate MEMS based on a family of graphene-like materials
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Núñez, D., Galán-Vioque, J., and Murcia, L.
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- 2023
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7. Health-related quality of life in individuals with metabolic syndrome: A cross-sectional study
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Marcos-Delgado, A., López-García, E., Martínez-González, M.A., Salas-Salvadó, J., Corella, D., Fitó, M., Romaguera, D., Vioque, J., Alonso-Gómez, A.M., Wärnberg, J., Martínez, J.A., Serra-Majem, L., Estruch, R., Fernández-García, J.C., Lapetra, J., Pintó, X., Tur, J.A., López-Miranda, J., Cano-Ibañez, N., Delgado-Rodríguez, M., Matía-Martín, P., Daimiel, L., Carriedo, E., Vidal, J., Vázquez, C., Ros, E., Lozano-Oloriz, E., Bulló, M., Sorlí, J.V., Zomeño, M.D., Fiol, M., González-Palacios, S., Sorto-Sánchez, C., Pérez-Farinós, N., Goñi-Ruiz, N., Sanchez-Villegas, A., Muñoz-Garach, A., Santos-Lozano, J.M., Galera, A., Bouzas, C., Toledo, E., Babio, N., González, J.I., del Val-García, J.L., Moñino, M., Martínez-Vergaran, M.C., Goicolea-Güemez, L., Galilea-Zabalza, I., Basora, J., Muñoz, M.A., Builf, P., and Fernández-Villa, T.
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- 2020
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8. Impact of mediterranean diet promotion on environmental sustainability: a longitudinal analysis
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Álvarez-Álvarez L; Vitelli-Storelli F; Rubín-García M; García S; Bouzas C; Ruíz-Canela M; Corella D; Salas-Salvadó J; Fitó M; Martínez JA; Tojal-Sierra L; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Santos-Lozano JM; Serra-Majem L; Bueno-Cavanillas A; García-Fernández C; Esteve-Luque V; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Torrego-Ellacuría M; Vidal J; Prieto L; Daimiel L; Casas R; García Arellano A; Shyam S; González JI; Castañer O; García-Rios A; Ortiz Díaz F; Fernández AC; Sánchez-Villegas A; Morey M; Cano-Ibañez N; Sorto-Sánchez C; Bernal-López MR; Bes-Rastrollo M; Nishi SK; Coltell O; Zomeño MD; Peña-Orihuela PJ; Aparicio DV; Zulet MA; Vázquez Z; Babio N; Pérez KA; Tur JA; Martín-Sánchez V, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Álvarez-Álvarez L; Vitelli-Storelli F; Rubín-García M; García S; Bouzas C; Ruíz-Canela M; Corella D; Salas-Salvadó J; Fitó M; Martínez JA; Tojal-Sierra L; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Santos-Lozano JM; Serra-Majem L; Bueno-Cavanillas A; García-Fernández C; Esteve-Luque V; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Torrego-Ellacuría M; Vidal J; Prieto L; Daimiel L; Casas R; García Arellano A; Shyam S; González JI; Castañer O; García-Rios A; Ortiz Díaz F; Fernández AC; Sánchez-Villegas A; Morey M; Cano-Ibañez N; Sorto-Sánchez C; Bernal-López MR; Bes-Rastrollo M; Nishi SK; Coltell O; Zomeño MD; Peña-Orihuela PJ; Aparicio DV; Zulet MA; Vázquez Z; Babio N; Pérez KA; Tur JA; Martín-Sánchez V
- Abstract
This article aims to estimate the differences in environmental impact (greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions, land use, energy used, acidification and potential eutrophication) after one year of promoting a Mediterranean diet (MD).Baseline and 1-year follow-up data from 5800 participants in the PREDIMED-Plus study were used. Each participant's food intake was estimated using validated semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaires, and the adherence to MD using the Dietary Score. The influence of diet on environmental impact was assessed through the EAT-Lancet Commission tables. The influence of diet on environmental impact was assessed through the EAT-Lancet Commission tables. The association between MD adherence and its environmental impact was calculated using adjusted multivariate linear regression models.After one year of intervention, the kcal/day consumed was significantly reduced (-125,1 kcal/day), adherence to a MD pattern was improved (+0,9) and the environmental impact due to the diet was significantly reduced (GHG: -361 g/CO2-eq; Acidification:-11,5 g SO2-eq; Eutrophication:-4,7 g PO4-eq; Energy use:-842,7 kJ; and Land use:-2,2 m2). Higher adherence to MD (high vs. low) was significantly associated with lower environmental impact both at baseline and one year follow-up. Meat products had the greatest environmental impact in all the factors analysed, both at baseline and at one-year follow-up, in spite of the reduction observed in their consumption.A program promoting a MD, after one year of intervention, significantly reduced the environmental impact in all the factors analysed. Meat products had the greatest environmental impact in all the dimensions analysed.Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2024
9. Association between Beverage Consumption and Environmental Sustainability in an Adult Population with Metabolic Syndrome
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Bioquímica i Biotecnologia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, García S; Monserrat-Mesquida M; Argelich E; Ugarriza L; Salas-Salvadó J; Bautista I; Vioque J; Zomeño MD; Corella D; Pintó X; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Daimiel L; Martínez JA; Nishi S; Herrera-Ramos E; González-Palacios S; Fitó M; Asensio EM; Fanlo-Maresma M; Cano-Ibáñez N; Cuadrado-Soto E; Abete I; Tur JA; Bouzas C, Bioquímica i Biotecnologia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and García S; Monserrat-Mesquida M; Argelich E; Ugarriza L; Salas-Salvadó J; Bautista I; Vioque J; Zomeño MD; Corella D; Pintó X; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Daimiel L; Martínez JA; Nishi S; Herrera-Ramos E; González-Palacios S; Fitó M; Asensio EM; Fanlo-Maresma M; Cano-Ibáñez N; Cuadrado-Soto E; Abete I; Tur JA; Bouzas C
- Abstract
Beverages are an important part of the diet, but their environmental impact has been scarcely assessed. The aim of this study was to assess how changes in beverage consumption over a one-year period can impact the environmental sustainability of the diet. This is a one-year longitudinal study of 55-75-year-old participants with metabolic syndrome (n = 1122) within the frame of the PREDIMED-Plus study. Food and beverage intake were assessed using a validated food frequency questionnaire and a validated beverage-specific questionnaire. The Agribalyse® 3.0.1 database was used to calculate environmental impact parameters such as greenhouse gas emission, energy, water, and land use. A sustainability beverage score was created by considering the evaluated environmental markers. A higher beverage sustainability score was obtained when decreasing the consumption of bottled water, natural and packed fruit juice, milk, and drinkable dairy, soups and broths, sorbets and jellies, soft drinks, tea without sugar, beer (with and without alcohol), and wine, as well as when increasing the consumption of tap water and coffee with milk and without sugar. Beverage consumption should be considered when assessing the environmental impact of a diet. Trial registration: ISRCTN, ISRCTN89898870. Registered 5 September 2013.
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- 2024
10. Microbial Phenolic Metabolites Are Associated with Improved Cognitive Health
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Doímnguez-Lpóez, I; Galkina, P; Parilli-Moser, I; Arancibia-Riveros, C; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Malcampo, M; Martínez, JA; Tojal-Sierra, L; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Santos-Lozano, JM; Serra-Majem, L; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Rubín-García, M; Pintó, X; Fernández-Aranda, F; Delgado-Rodríguez, M; Barabash-Bustelo, A; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Toledo, E; Atzeni, A; Asensio, EM; Vera, N; Garcia-Rios, A; Torres-Collado, L; Pérez-Farinós, N; Zulet, M; Chaplin, A; Casas, R; Martín-Peláez, S; Vaquero-Luna, J; Gómez-Pérez, AM; Vázquez-Ruiz, Z; Shyam, S; Ortega-Azorín, C; Talens, N; Peña-Orihuela, PJ; Oncina-Canovas, A; Diez-Espino, J; Babio, N; Fitó, M; Lamuela-Raventós, RM, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Doímnguez-Lpóez, I; Galkina, P; Parilli-Moser, I; Arancibia-Riveros, C; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Malcampo, M; Martínez, JA; Tojal-Sierra, L; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Santos-Lozano, JM; Serra-Majem, L; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Rubín-García, M; Pintó, X; Fernández-Aranda, F; Delgado-Rodríguez, M; Barabash-Bustelo, A; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Toledo, E; Atzeni, A; Asensio, EM; Vera, N; Garcia-Rios, A; Torres-Collado, L; Pérez-Farinós, N; Zulet, M; Chaplin, A; Casas, R; Martín-Peláez, S; Vaquero-Luna, J; Gómez-Pérez, AM; Vázquez-Ruiz, Z; Shyam, S; Ortega-Azorín, C; Talens, N; Peña-Orihuela, PJ; Oncina-Canovas, A; Diez-Espino, J; Babio, N; Fitó, M; Lamuela-Raventós, RM
- Abstract
Diets rich in polyphenols has been associated with better cognitive performance. The aim of this study is to assess the relationship between microbial phenolic metabolites (MPM) in urine and cognition in the context of an older population at high cardiovascular risk.A cross-sectional analysis is conducted in 400 individuals of the PREDIMED-Plus study. Liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry is used to identify urinary MPM. Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) adherence is estimated with a 17-item questionnaire and cognitive function is evaluated with a battery of neuropsychological tests. Multivariable-adjusted linear regression models are fitted to assess the relationship of urinary MPM with the MedDiet and cognitive tests. Protocatechuic acid and enterolactone glucuronide are associated with higher adherence to the MedDiet. Regarding cognitive function, protocatechuic acid, vanillic acid glucuronide, 3-hydroxybenzoic acid, enterodiol glucuronide, and enterolactone glucuronide are directly associated with a global composite score of all the cognitive tests. Furthermore, protocatechuic acid and enterolactone glucuronide are associated with higher scores in the Mini-Mental State Examination, whereas enterodiol glucuronide is associated with improved Clock Drawing Test scores.These results suggest that the MedDiet is linked to MPM associated with better cognitive performance in an older population.© 2023 The Authors. Molecular Nutrition & Food Research published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.
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- 2024
11. Fermented dairy products, diet quality, and cardio–metabolic profile of a Mediterranean cohort at high cardiovascular risk
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Mena-Sánchez, G., Babio, N., Martínez-González, M.Á., Corella, D., Schröder, H., Vioque, J., Romaguera, D., Martínez, J.A., Lopez-Miranda, J., Estruch, R., Wärnberg, J., Bueno-Cavanillas, A., Serra-Majem, L., Tur, J.A., Arós, F., Tinahones, F.J., Sánchez, V.M., Lapetra, J., Pintó, X., Vidal, J., Vázquez, C., Ordovás, J.M., Delgado-Rodriguez, M., Matía-Martín, P., Basora, J., Buil-Cosiales, P., Fernandez-Carrion, R., Fitó, M., and Salas-Salvadó, J.
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- 2018
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12. Latent Childhood Exposure to Mixtures of Metals and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in 4–5-Year-Old Children Living in Spain
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Notario-Barandiaran, L., primary, Díaz-Coto, S., additional, Jimenez-Redondo, N., additional, Guxens, M., additional, Vrijheid, M., additional, Andiarena, A., additional, Irizar, A., additional, Riaño-Galan, I., additional, Fernández-Somoano, A., additional, Llop, S., additional, Lozano, M., additional, Karagas, M. R., additional, Meharg, A., additional, Carey, M., additional, Meharg, C., additional, Ralphs, K., additional, McCreanor, C., additional, Vioque, J., additional, Martinez-Camblor, P., additional, and Signes-Pastor, A. J., additional
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- 2023
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13. Coffee Drinking: The Rationale for Treating It as a Potential Effect Modifier of Carcinogenic Exposures
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Porta, M., Vioque, J., Ayude, D., Alguacil, J., Jariod, M., Ruiz, L., and Murillo, J. A.
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- 2003
14. Exposure to metal mixtures and neurodevelopment outcomes in 4-5-year-old children living in Spain
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Redondo, N. Jimenez, primary, Coto, S. Díaz, additional, Camblor, P. Martinez, additional, Guxens, M., additional, Vrijheid, M., additional, Andiarena, A., additional, Irizar, A., additional, Galan, I. Riaño, additional, Somoano, A. Fernández, additional, Llop, S., additional, Lozano, M., additional, Karagas, M. R., additional, Vioque, J., additional, Carey, M., additional, Meharg, A., additional, Meharg, C., additional, Ralphs, K., additional, Mccreanor, C., additional, Sendra, E., additional, and Pastor, A. J. Signes, additional
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- 2023
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15. Worldwide trends in diabetes since 1980: a pooled analysis of 751 population-based studies with 4·4 million participants
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Zhou, B, Lu, Y, Hajifathalian, K, Bentham, J, Di Cesare, M, Danaei, G, Bixby, H, Cowan, MJ, Ali, MK, Taddei, C, Lo, WC, Reis-Santos, B, Stevens, GA, Riley, LM, Miranda, JJ, Bjerregaard, P, Rivera, JA, Fouad, HM, Ma, G, Mbanya, JC, McGarvey, ST, Mohan, V, Onat, A, Pilav, A, Ramachandran, A, Romdhane, HB, Paciorek, CJ, Bennett, JE, Ezzati, M, Abdeen, ZA, Abdul Kadir, K, Abu-Rmeileh, NM, Acosta-Cazares, B, Adams, R, Aekplakorn, W, Aguilar-Salinas, CA, Agyemang, C, Ahmadvand, A, Al-Othman, AR, Alkerwi, A, Amouyel, P, Amuzu, A, Andersen, LB, Anderssen, SA, Anjana, RM, Aounallah-Skhiri, H, Aris, T, Arlappa, N, Arveiler, D, Assah, FK, Avdicová, M, Azizi, F, Balakrishna, N, Bandosz, P, Barbagallo, CM, Barceló, A, Batieha, AM, Baur, LA, Benet, M, Bernabe-Ortiz, A, Bharadwaj, S, Bhargava, SK, Bi, Y, Bjertness, E, Bjertness, MB, Björkelund, C, Blokstra, A, Bo, S, Boehm, BO, Boissonnet, CP, Bovet, P, Brajkovich, I, Breckenkamp, J, Brenner, H, Brewster, LM, Brian, GR, Bruno, G, Bugge, A, Cabrera de León, A, Can, G, Cândido, AP, Capuano, V, Carlsson, AC, Carvalho, MJ, Casanueva, FF, Casas, JP, Caserta, CA, Castetbon, K, Chamukuttan, S, Chaturvedi, N, Chen, CJ, Chen, F, Chen, S, Cheng, CY, Chetrit, A, Chiou, ST, Cho, Y, Chudek, J, Cifkova, R, Claessens, F, Concin, H, Cooper, C, Cooper, R, Costanzo, S, Cottel, D, Cowell, C, Crujeiras, AB, D'Arrigo, G, Dallongeville, J, Dankner, R, Dauchet, L, de Gaetano, G, De Henauw, S, Deepa, M, Dehghan, A, Deschamps, V, Dhana, K, Di Castelnuovo, AF, Djalalinia, S, Doua, K, Drygas, W, Du, Y, Dzerve, V, Egbagbe, EE, Eggertsen, R, El Ati, J, Elosua, R, Erasmus, RT, Erem, C, Ergor, G, Eriksen, L, Escobedo-de la Peña, J, Fall, CH, Farzadfar, F, Felix-Redondo, FJ, Ferguson, TS, Fernández-Bergés, D, Ferrari, M, Ferreccio, C, Feskens, EJ, Finn, JD, Föger, B, Foo, LH, Forslund, AS, Francis, DK, Franco Mdo, C, Franco, OH, Frontera, G, Furusawa, T, Gaciong, Z, Garnett, SP, Gaspoz, JM, Gasull, M, Gates, L, Geleijnse, JM, Ghasemian, A, Ghimire, A, Giampaoli, S, Gianfagna, F, Giovannelli, J, Giwercman, A, Gross, MG, González Rivas, JP, Gorbea, MB, Gottrand, F, Grafnetter, D, Grodzicki, T, Grøntved, A, Gruden, G, Gu, D, Guan, OP, Guerrero, R, Guessous, I, Guimaraes, AL, Gutierrez, L, Hambleton, IR, Hardy, R, Hari Kumar, R, Hata, J, He, J, Heidemann, C, Herrala, S, Hihtaniemi, IT, Ho, SY, Ho, SC, Hofman, A, Hormiga, CM, Horta, BL, Houti, L, Howitt, C, Htay, TT, Htet, AS, Htike, MM, Hu, Y, Hussieni, AS, Huybrechts, I, Hwalla, N, Iacoviello, L, Iannone, AG, Ibrahim, MM, Ikeda, N, Ikram, MA, Irazola, VE, Islam, M, Iwasaki, M, Jacobs, JM, Jafar, T, Jamil, KM, Jasienska, G, Jiang, CQ, Jonas, JB, Joshi, P, Kafatos, A, Kalter-Leibovici, O, Kasaeian, A, Katz, J, Kaur, P, Kavousi, M, Keinänen-Kiukaanniemi, S, Kelishadi, R, Kengne, AP, Kersting, M, Khader, YS, Khalili, D, Khang, YH, Kiechl, S, Kim, J, Kolsteren, P, Korrovits, P, Kratzer, W, Kromhout, D, Kujala, UM, Kula, K, Kyobutungi, C, Laatikainen, T, Lachat, C, Laid, Y, Lam, TH, Landrove, O, Lanska, V, Lappas, G, Laxmaiah, A, Leclercq, C, Lee, J, Lehtimäki, T, Lekhraj, R, León-Muñoz, LM, Li, Y, Lim, WY, Lima-Costa, MF, Lin, HH, Lin, X, Lissner, L, Lorbeer, R, Lozano, JE, Luksiene, D, Lundqvist, A, Lytsy, P, Machado-Coelho, GL, Machi, S, Maggi, S, Magliano, DJ, Makdisse, M, Mallikharjuna Rao, K, Manios, Y, Manzato, E, Margozzini, P, Marques-Vidal, P, Martorell, R, Masoodi, SR, Mathiesen, EB, Matsha, TE, McFarlane, SR, McLachlan, S, McNulty, BA, Mediene-Benchekor, S, Meirhaeghe, A, Menezes, AM, Merat, S, Meshram, II, Mi, J, Miquel, JF, Mohamed, MK, Mohammad, K, Mohammadifard, N, Mohd Yusoff, MF, Møller, NC, Molnár, D, Mondo, CK, Morejon, A, Moreno, LA, Morgan, K, Moschonis, G, Mossakowska, M, Mostafa, A, Mota, J, Motta, J, Mu, TT, Muiesan, ML, Müller-Nurasyid, M, Mursu, J, Nagel, G, Námešná, J, Nang, EE, NangThetia, VB, Navarrete-Muñoz, EM, Ndiaye, NC, Nenko, I, Nervi, F, Nguyen, ND, Nguyen, QN, Nieto-Martínez, RE, Ning, G, Ninomiya, T, Noale, M, Noto, D, Nsour, MA, 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16. Yoghurt Intake and Gastric Cancer: A Pooled Analysis of 16 Studies of the StoP Consortium
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Collatuzzo, G. Negri, E. Pelucchi, C. Bonzi, R. Turati, F. Rabkin, C.S. Liao, L.M. Sinha, R. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. López-Carrillo, L. Lunet, N. Morais, S. Albanes, D. Weinstein, S.J. Parisi, D. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Dierssen-Sotos, T. Jiménez-Moleón, J.J. Vioque, J. Garcia de la Hera, M. Curado, M.P. Dias-Neto, E. Hernández-Ramírez, R.U. López-Cervantes, M. Ward, M.H. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Zhang, Z.-F. Trichopoulou, A. Karakatsani, A. Camargo, M.C. La Vecchia, C. Boffetta, P. and Collatuzzo, G. Negri, E. Pelucchi, C. Bonzi, R. Turati, F. Rabkin, C.S. Liao, L.M. Sinha, R. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. López-Carrillo, L. Lunet, N. Morais, S. Albanes, D. Weinstein, S.J. Parisi, D. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Dierssen-Sotos, T. Jiménez-Moleón, J.J. Vioque, J. Garcia de la Hera, M. Curado, M.P. Dias-Neto, E. Hernández-Ramírez, R.U. López-Cervantes, M. Ward, M.H. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Zhang, Z.-F. Trichopoulou, A. Karakatsani, A. Camargo, M.C. La Vecchia, C. Boffetta, P.
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Background: Yoghurt can modify gastrointestinal disease risk, possibly acting on gut microbiota. Our study aimed at exploring the under-investigated association between yoghurt and gastric cancer (GC). Methods: We pooled data from 16 studies from the Stomach Cancer Pooling (StoP) Project. Total yoghurt intake was derived from food frequency questionnaires. We calculated study-specific odds ratios (ORs) of GC and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for increasing categories of yoghurt consumption using univariate and multivariable unconditional logistic regression models. A two-stage analysis, with a meta-analysis of the pooled adjusted data, was conducted. Results: The analysis included 6278 GC cases and 14,181 controls, including 1179 cardia and 3463 non-cardia, 1191 diffuse and 1717 intestinal cases. The overall meta-analysis revealed no association between increasing portions of yoghurt intake (continuous) and GC (OR = 0.98, 95% CI = 0.94–1.02). When restricting to cohort studies, a borderline inverse relationship was found (OR = 0.93, 95% CI = 0.88–0.99). The adjusted and unadjusted OR were 0.92 (95% CI = 0.85–0.99) and 0.78 (95% CI = 0.73–0.84) for any vs. no yoghurt consumption and GC risk. The OR for 1 category of increase in yoghurt intake was 0.96 (95% CI = 0.91–1.02) for cardia, 1.03 (95% CI = 1.00–1.07) for non-cardia, 1.12 (95% CI = 1.07–1.19) for diffuse and 1.02 (95% CI = 0.97–1.06) for intestinal GC. No effect was seen within hospital-based and population-based studies, nor in men or women. Conclusions: We found no association between yoghurt and GC in the main adjusted models, despite sensitivity analyses suggesting a protective effect. Additional studies should further address this association. © 2023 by the authors.
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- 2023
17. Mushroom consumption and risk of gastric cancer: A pooled analysis within the stomach cancer pooling project and a combined meta-analysis with other observational studies
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Ba, D.M. Ssentongo, P. Pelucchi, C. Negri, E. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Zhang, Z.-F. Yu, G.-P. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Hamada, G.S. Zaridze, D. Maximovich, D. Obón-Santacana, M. Álvarez-Álvarez, L. Vioque, J. Garcia De La Hera, M. López-Carrillo, L. López-Cervantes, M. Mu, L. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Curado, M.P. Lunet, N. La Vecchia, C. Muscat, J. and Ba, D.M. Ssentongo, P. Pelucchi, C. Negri, E. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Zhang, Z.-F. Yu, G.-P. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Hamada, G.S. Zaridze, D. Maximovich, D. Obón-Santacana, M. Álvarez-Álvarez, L. Vioque, J. Garcia De La Hera, M. López-Carrillo, L. López-Cervantes, M. Mu, L. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Curado, M.P. Lunet, N. La Vecchia, C. Muscat, J.
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Edible mushrooms have high concentrations of vitamins and minerals. They are considered 'functional foods' for their disease-prevention properties. Mushroom consumption may reduce the risk of gastric cancer, the fifth most common cancer worldwide. We investigated the association between mushroom consumption and gastric cancer risk in a pooled analysis within the Stomach Cancer Pooling (StoP) Project and in a meta-analysis that also included previously published studies. A total of 3900 gastric cancer cases and 7792 controls from 11 studies were included in the StoP analysis. Mushroom consumption was measured using food frequency questionnaires. Higher mushroom consumption was associated with a lower risk of gastric cancer [relative risk (RR) for the highest vs. lowest consumption categories, 0.82; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.71-0.95]. The corresponding RRs were 0.59 (95% CI, 0.26-1.33) in a meta-analysis of four previously published studies and 0.77 for all studies combined (95% CI, 0.63-0.95; n = 15 studies). In geographic subgroup analysis, the pooled risk in Western Pacific countries was (RR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.40-0.87; n = 6). The stronger effect in Asian countries may reflect high level of antioxidants in mushroom species consumed in Asia. © 2023 Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. All rights reserved.
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- 2023
18. Carbohydrate quality, fecal microbiota and cardiometabolic health in older adults: a cohort study.
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Atzeni, A., Nishi, S.K., Babio, N., Belzer, C., Konstanti, P., Vioque, J., Corella, D., Castañer, O., Vidal, J., Moreno-Indias, I., Torres-Collado, L., Asensio, E.M., Fitó, M., Gomez-Perez, A.M., Arias, A., Ruiz-Canela, M., Hu, F.B., Tinahones, F.J., Salas-Salvadó, J., Atzeni, A., Nishi, S.K., Babio, N., Belzer, C., Konstanti, P., Vioque, J., Corella, D., Castañer, O., Vidal, J., Moreno-Indias, I., Torres-Collado, L., Asensio, E.M., Fitó, M., Gomez-Perez, A.M., Arias, A., Ruiz-Canela, M., Hu, F.B., Tinahones, F.J., and Salas-Salvadó, J.
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01 december 2023, Item does not contain fulltext, The impact of carbohydrate quality, measured by the carbohydrate quality index (CQI), on gut microbiota and health has been scarcely investigated. The aim of this study was to cross-sectionally and longitudinally explore the relationships between CQI, fecal microbiota, and cardiometabolic risk factors in an elderly Mediterranean population at high cardiovascular risk. At baseline and 1-year, CQI was assessed from food frequency questionnaires data, cardiometabolic risk factors were measured, and fecal microbiota profiled from 16S sequencing. Multivariable-adjusted linear regression models were fitted to assess the associations between tertiles of baseline CQI, fecal microbiota, and cardiometabolic risk factors at baseline, and between tertiles of 1-year change in CQI, 1-year change in fecal microbiota and cardiometabolic risk factors. Cross-sectionally, higher CQI was positively associated with Shannon alpha diversity index, and abundance of genera Faecalibacterium and Christensenellaceae R7 group, and negatively associated with the abundance of Odoribacter, and uncultured Rhodospirillales genera. Some of these genera were associated with higher glycated hemoglobin and lower body mass index. In addition, we observed a positive association between CQI, and some pathways related with the metabolism of butyrate precursors and plants-origin molecules. Longitudinally, 1-year improvement in CQI was associated with a concurrent increase in the abundance of genera Butyrivibrio. Increased abundance of this genera was associated with 1-year improvement in insulin status. These observations suggest that a better quality of carbohydrate intake is associated with improved metabolic health, and this improvement could be modulated by greater alpha diversity and abundance of specific genera linked to beneficial metabolic outcomes.
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- 2023
19. Association of adiposity and its changes over time with COVID-19 risk in older adults with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome: a longitudinal evaluation in the PREDIMED-Plus cohort
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Shyam, S; Garcia-Gavilan, JF; Paz-Graniel, I; Gaforio, JJ; Martinez-Gonzalez, MA; Corella, D; Martinez, JA; Alonso-Gomez, AM; Waernberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, JL; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Sanchez, VM; Pinto, X; Matia-Martin, P; Vidal, J; Vazquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Fernandez-Aranda, F; Nishi, SK; Garcia-Regata, O; Toledo, E; Asensio, EM; Castaner, O; Garcia-Rios, A; Torres-Collado, L; Gomez-Gracia, E; Zulet, MA; Ruiz, NG; Casas, R; Cano-Ibanez, N; Tojal-Sierra, L; Gomez-Perez, AM; Sorli, JV; Cinza-Sanjurjo, S; Martin-Pelaez, S; Pena-Orihuela, PJ; Oncina-Canovas, A; Perez-Araluce, R; Zomeno, MD; Chaplin, A; Delgado-Rodriguez, M; Babio, N; Fito, M; Salas-Salvado, J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Shyam, S; Garcia-Gavilan, JF; Paz-Graniel, I; Gaforio, JJ; Martinez-Gonzalez, MA; Corella, D; Martinez, JA; Alonso-Gomez, AM; Waernberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, JL; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Sanchez, VM; Pinto, X; Matia-Martin, P; Vidal, J; Vazquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Fernandez-Aranda, F; Nishi, SK; Garcia-Regata, O; Toledo, E; Asensio, EM; Castaner, O; Garcia-Rios, A; Torres-Collado, L; Gomez-Gracia, E; Zulet, MA; Ruiz, NG; Casas, R; Cano-Ibanez, N; Tojal-Sierra, L; Gomez-Perez, AM; Sorli, JV; Cinza-Sanjurjo, S; Martin-Pelaez, S; Pena-Orihuela, PJ; Oncina-Canovas, A; Perez-Araluce, R; Zomeno, MD; Chaplin, A; Delgado-Rodriguez, M; Babio, N; Fito, M; Salas-Salvado, J
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Cross-sectionally, older age and obesity are associated with increased coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) risk. We assessed the longitudinal associations of baseline and changes in adiposity parameters with COVID-19 incidence in older adults at high cardiovascular risk.This analysis included 6874 men and women (aged 55-75 years) with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome in the PREDIMED-Plus lifestyle intervention trial for cardiovascular risk reduction. Body weight, body-mass-index (BMI), waist circumference, waist-to-height ratio (WHtR), and a body shape index (ABSI) were measured at baseline and annual follow-up visits. COVID-19 was ascertained by an independent Event Committee until 31 December 2021. Cox regression models were fitted to evaluate the risk of COVID-19 incidence based on baseline adiposity parameters measured 5-6 years before the pandemic and their changes at the visit prior to censoring.At the time of censoring, 653 incident COVID-19 cases occurred. Higher baseline body weight, BMI, waist circumference, and WHtR were associated with increased COVID-19 risk. During the follow-up, every unit increase in body weight (HRadj (95%CI): 1.01 (1.00, 1.03)) and BMI (HRadj: 1.04 (1.003, 1.08)) was associated with increased COVID-19 risk.In older adults with overweight/obesity, clinically significant weight loss may protect against COVID-19.This study is registered at the International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial (ISRCT; http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN89898870 ).© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.
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- 2023
20. Metabolic syndrome criteria and severity and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in an adult population
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Garcia, S; Pastor, R; Monserrat-Mesquida, M; Alvarez-Alvarez, L; Rubín-García, M; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Goday, A; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Riquelme-Gallego, B; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matia, P; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Sayón-Orea, C; Guillem-Saiz, P; Valle-Hita, C; Cabanes, R; Abete, I; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Gómez-Gracia, E; Tercero-Maciá, C; Colom, A; García-Ríos, A; Castro-Barquero, S; Fernández-García, JC; Santos-Lozano, JM; Cenoz, JC; Barragán, R; Khoury, N; Castañer, O; Zulet, MA; Vaquero-Luna, J; Bes-Rastrollo, M; de las Heras-delgado, S; Ciurana, R; Martin-Sánchez, V; Tur, JA; Bouzas, C, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Garcia, S; Pastor, R; Monserrat-Mesquida, M; Alvarez-Alvarez, L; Rubín-García, M; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Goday, A; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Riquelme-Gallego, B; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matia, P; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Sayón-Orea, C; Guillem-Saiz, P; Valle-Hita, C; Cabanes, R; Abete, I; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Gómez-Gracia, E; Tercero-Maciá, C; Colom, A; García-Ríos, A; Castro-Barquero, S; Fernández-García, JC; Santos-Lozano, JM; Cenoz, JC; Barragán, R; Khoury, N; Castañer, O; Zulet, MA; Vaquero-Luna, J; Bes-Rastrollo, M; de las Heras-delgado, S; Ciurana, R; Martin-Sánchez, V; Tur, JA; Bouzas, C
- Abstract
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) has become a growing risk factor of some non-communicable diseases. Increase of greenhouse gas emissions affects the planet.To assess the association between MetS severity and amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted in an adult population.Cross-sectional study (n = 6646; 55-76-year-old-men; 60-75-year-old-women with MetS).Dietary habits were assessed using a pre-validated semi quantitative 143-item food frequency questionnaire. The amount of CO2 emitted due to the production of food consumed by person and day was calculated using a European database, and the severity of the MetS was calculated with the MetS Severity Score.Higher glycaemia levels were found in people with higher CO2 emissions. The risk of having high severe MetS was related to high CO2 emissions.Low CO2 emissions diet would help to reduce MetS severity. Advantages for both health and the environment were found following a more sustainable diet.ISRCTN, ISRCTN89898870 . Registered 05 September 2013.© 2023. The Author(s).
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- 2023
21. Gut microbiota in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: a PREDIMED-Plus trial sub analysis
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Gómez-Pérez, AM; Ruiz-Limón, P; Salas-Salvadó, J; Vioque, J; Corella, D; Fitó, M; Vidal, J; Atzeni, A; Torres-Collado, L; Alvarez-Sala, A; Martínez, MA; Goday, A; Benaiges, D; García-Gavilán, J; López, MRB; Moreno-Indias, I; Tinahones, FJ, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Gómez-Pérez, AM; Ruiz-Limón, P; Salas-Salvadó, J; Vioque, J; Corella, D; Fitó, M; Vidal, J; Atzeni, A; Torres-Collado, L; Alvarez-Sala, A; Martínez, MA; Goday, A; Benaiges, D; García-Gavilán, J; López, MRB; Moreno-Indias, I; Tinahones, FJ
- Abstract
To evaluate the changes in the gut microbiota associated with changes in the biochemical markers of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) after a lifestyle intervention with the Mediterranean diet. Participants (n = 297) from two centers of PREDIMED-Plus trial (Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea) were divided into three different groups based on the change tertile in the Hepatic Steatosis Index (HSI) or the Fibrosis-4 score (FIB-4) between baseline and one year of intervention. One-year changes in HSI were: tertile 1 (T1) (-24.9 to -7.51), T2 (-7.5 to -1.86), T3 (-1.85 to 13.64). The most significant differences in gut microbiota within the year of intervention were observed in the T1 and T3. According to the FIB-4, participants were categorized in non-suspected fibrosis (NSF) and with indeterminate or suspected fibrosis (SF). NSF participants showed higher abundances of Alcaligenaceae, Bacteroidaceae, Bifidobacteriaceae, Clostridiaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Peptostreptococcaceae, Verrucomicrobiaceae compared to those with SF. Then, participants were divided depending on the FIB-4 tertile of change: T1 (-89.60 to -5.57), T2 (-5.56 to 11.4), and T3 (11.41 to 206.24). FIB-4 T1 showed a decrease in Akkermansia and an increase in Desulfovibrio. T2 had an increase in Victivallaceae, Clostridiaceae, and Desulfovibrio. T3 showed a decrease in Enterobacteriaceae, and an increase in Sutterella, Faecalibacterium, and Blautia. A relation between biochemical index changes of NAFLD/NASH (HSI and FIB-4) and gut microbiota changes were found. These observations highlight the importance of lifestyle intervention in the modulation of gut microbiota and the management of metabolic syndrome and its hepatic manifestations.
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- 2023
22. Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the PREDIMED-Plus randomized clinical trial: Effects on the interventions, participants follow-up, and adiposity
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Paz-Graniel, I; Fitó, M; Ros, E; Buil-Cosiales, P; Corella, D; Babio, N; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Martín-Sánchez, V; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matía-Martín, P; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; García-Gavilán, JF; Toledo, E; Nishi, SK; Sorli, JV; Castañer, O; García-Ríos, A; de la Hera, MG; Barón-López, FJ; Ruiz-Canela, M; Morey, M; Casas, R; Garrido-Garrido, EM; Tojal-Sierra, L; Fernández-García, JC; Vázquez-Ruiz, Z; Fernández-Carrión, R; Goday, A; Peña-Orihuela, PJ; Compañ-Gabucio, L; Schröder, H; Martínez-Gonzalez, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Paz-Graniel, I; Fitó, M; Ros, E; Buil-Cosiales, P; Corella, D; Babio, N; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Martín-Sánchez, V; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matía-Martín, P; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; García-Gavilán, JF; Toledo, E; Nishi, SK; Sorli, JV; Castañer, O; García-Ríos, A; de la Hera, MG; Barón-López, FJ; Ruiz-Canela, M; Morey, M; Casas, R; Garrido-Garrido, EM; Tojal-Sierra, L; Fernández-García, JC; Vázquez-Ruiz, Z; Fernández-Carrión, R; Goday, A; Peña-Orihuela, PJ; Compañ-Gabucio, L; Schröder, H; Martínez-Gonzalez, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected the implementation of most ongoing clinical trials worldwide including the PREDIMED-Plus study. The PREDIMED-Plus is an ongoing, multicenter, controlled intervention trial, aimed at weight-loss and cardiovascular disease prevention, in which participants were randomized (1:1 ratio) to an intervention group (energy-reduced Mediterranean diet, promotion of physical activity, and behavioral support) or to a control group (Mediterranean diet with usual care advice). When the pandemic began, the trial was in the midst of the planned intervention. The objective of this report was to examine the effects of the pandemic on the delivery of the intervention and to describe the strategies established to mitigate the possible adverse effects of the pandemic lockdown on data collection and adiposity. Methods: We assessed the integrity of the PREDIMED-Plus trial during 5 identified periods of the COVID-19 pandemic determined according to restrictions dictated by the Spanish government authorities. A standardized questionnaire was delivered to each of the 23 PREDIMED-Plus recruiting centers to collected data regarding the trial integrity. The effect of the restrictions on intervention components (diet, physical activity) was evaluated with data obtained in the three identified lockdown phases: pre lockdown, lockdown proper, and post lockdown. Results: During the lockdown (March/2020-June/2021), 4,612 participants (48% women, mean age 65y) attended pre-specified yearly follow-up visits to receive lifestyle recommendations and obtain adiposity measures. The overall mean (SD) of the proportions reported by each center showed that 40.4% (25.4) participants had in-person visits, 39.8% (18.2) participants were contacted by telephone and 35% (26
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- 2023
23. Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and adherence to Mediterranean diet in an adult population: the Mediterranean diet index as a pollution level index
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, García, S; Bouzas, C; Mateos, D; Pastor, R; Alvarez, L; Rubín, M; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Goday, A; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Riquelme-Gallego, B; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matía, P; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Bes-Rastrollo, M; Guillem-Saiz, P; Nishi, S; Cabanes, R; Abete, I; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Gómez-Gracia, E; Signes-Pastor, AJ; Colom, A; García-Ríos, A; Castro-Barquero, S; Fernández-García, JC; Santos-Lozano, JM; Vázquez, Z; Sorli, JV; Pascual, M; Castañer, O; Zulet, MA; Vaquero-Luna, J; Basterra-Gortari, FJ; Babio, N; Ciurana, R; Martín-Sánchez, V; Tur, JA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and García, S; Bouzas, C; Mateos, D; Pastor, R; Alvarez, L; Rubín, M; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Goday, A; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Riquelme-Gallego, B; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matía, P; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Bes-Rastrollo, M; Guillem-Saiz, P; Nishi, S; Cabanes, R; Abete, I; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Gómez-Gracia, E; Signes-Pastor, AJ; Colom, A; García-Ríos, A; Castro-Barquero, S; Fernández-García, JC; Santos-Lozano, JM; Vázquez, Z; Sorli, JV; Pascual, M; Castañer, O; Zulet, MA; Vaquero-Luna, J; Basterra-Gortari, FJ; Babio, N; Ciurana, R; Martín-Sánchez, V; Tur, JA
- Abstract
Research related to sustainable diets is is highly relevant to provide better understanding of the impact of dietary intake on the health and the environment.To assess the association between the adherence to an energy-restricted Mediterranean diet and the amount of CO2 emitted in an older adult population.Using a cross-sectional design, the association between the adherence to an energy-reduced Mediterranean Diet (erMedDiet) score and dietary CO2 emissions in 6646 participants was assessed.Food intake and adherence to the erMedDiet was assessed using validated food frequency questionnaire and 17-item Mediterranean questionnaire. Sociodemographic characteristics were documented. Environmental impact was calculated through greenhouse gas emissions estimations, specifically CO2 emissions of each participant diet per day, using a European database. Participants were distributed in quartiles according to their estimated CO2 emissions expressed in kg/day: Q1 (≤2.01 kg CO2), Q2 (2.02-2.34 kg CO2), Q3 (2.35-2.79 kg CO2) and Q4 (≥2.80 kg CO2).More men than women induced higher dietary levels of CO2 emissions. Participants reporting higher consumption of vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, whole cereals, preferring white meat, and having less consumption of red meat were mostly emitting less kg of CO2 through diet. Participants with higher adherence to the Mediterranean Diet showed lower odds for dietary CO2 emissions: Q2 (OR 0.87; 95%CI: 0.76-1.00), Q3 (OR 0.69; 95%CI: 0.69-0.79) and Q4 (OR 0.48; 95%CI: 0.42-0.55) vs Q1 (reference).The Mediterranean diet can be environmentally protective since the higher the adherence to the Mediterranean diet, the lower total dietary CO2 emissions. Mediterranean Diet index may be used as a pollution level index.© 2023. The Author(s).
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- 2023
24. Dietary Iron, Anemia Markers, Cognition, and Quality of Life in Older Community-Dwelling Subjects at High Cardiovascular Risk
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Donat-Vargas, C; Mico, V; San-Cristobal, R; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Fitó, M; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Damas-Fuentes, M; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Cinza-Sanjurjo, S; Pintó, X; Delgado-Rodríguez, M; Matía-Martín, P; Vidal, J; Causso, C; Ros, E; Toledo, E; Manzanares, JM; Ortega-Azorín, C; Castañer, O; Peña-Orihuela, PJ; Zazo, JM; Muñoz Bravo, C; Martinez-Urbistondo, D; Chaplin, A; Casas, R; Cano Ibáñez, N; Tojal-Sierra, L; Gómez-Perez, AM; Pascual Roquet-Jalmar, E; Mestre, C; Barragán, R; Schröder, H; Garcia-Rios, A; Candela García, I; Ruiz-Canela, M; Babio, N; Malcampo, M; Daimiel, L; Martinez, A, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Donat-Vargas, C; Mico, V; San-Cristobal, R; Martínez-González, MA; Salas-Salvadó, J; Corella, D; Fitó, M; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Damas-Fuentes, M; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Cinza-Sanjurjo, S; Pintó, X; Delgado-Rodríguez, M; Matía-Martín, P; Vidal, J; Causso, C; Ros, E; Toledo, E; Manzanares, JM; Ortega-Azorín, C; Castañer, O; Peña-Orihuela, PJ; Zazo, JM; Muñoz Bravo, C; Martinez-Urbistondo, D; Chaplin, A; Casas, R; Cano Ibáñez, N; Tojal-Sierra, L; Gómez-Perez, AM; Pascual Roquet-Jalmar, E; Mestre, C; Barragán, R; Schröder, H; Garcia-Rios, A; Candela García, I; Ruiz-Canela, M; Babio, N; Malcampo, M; Daimiel, L; Martinez, A
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Anemia causes hypo-oxygenation in the brain, which could lead to cognitive disorders. We examined dietary iron intake as well as anemia markers (i.e., hemoglobin, hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume) and diabetes coexistence in relation to neuropsychological function and quality of life. In this study, 6117 community-dwelling adults aged 55-75 years (men) and 60-75 years (women) with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome were involved. We performed the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Trail Making Test parts A and B (TMT-A/B), Semantic Verbal Fluency of animals (VFT-a), Phonological Verbal Fluency of letter P (VFT-p), Digit Span Test (DST), the Clock Drawing Test (CDT), and the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF36-HRQL test). Dietary iron intake did not influence neuropsychological function or quality of life. However, anemia and lower levels of anemia markers were associated with worse scores in all neurophysiological and SF36-HRQL tests overall, but were especially clear in the MMSE, TMT-B (cognitive flexibility), and the physical component of the SF36-HRQL test. The relationships between anemia and diminished performance in the TMT-A/B and VFT tasks were notably pronounced and statistically significant solely among participants with diabetes. In brief, anemia and reduced levels of anemia markers were linked to inferior cognitive function, worse scores in different domains of executive function, as well as a poorer physical, but not mental, component of quality of life. It was also suggested that the coexistence of diabetes in anemic patients may exacerbate this negative impact on cognition. Nevertheless, dietary iron intake showed no correlation with any of the outcomes. To make conclusive recommendations for clinical practice, our findings need to be thoro
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- 2023
25. Carbohydrate quality, fecal microbiota and cardiometabolic health in older adults: a cohort study
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Atzeni, A; Nishi, SK; Babio, N; Belzer, C; Konstanti, P; Vioque, J; Corella, D; Castañer, O; Vidal, J; Moreno-Indias, I; Torres-Collado, L; Asensio, EM; Fitó, M; Gomez-Perez, AM; Arias, A; Ruiz-Canela, M; Hu, FB; Tinahones, FJ; Salas-Salvadó, J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Atzeni, A; Nishi, SK; Babio, N; Belzer, C; Konstanti, P; Vioque, J; Corella, D; Castañer, O; Vidal, J; Moreno-Indias, I; Torres-Collado, L; Asensio, EM; Fitó, M; Gomez-Perez, AM; Arias, A; Ruiz-Canela, M; Hu, FB; Tinahones, FJ; Salas-Salvadó, J
- Abstract
The impact of carbohydrate quality, measured by the carbohydrate quality index (CQI), on gut microbiota and health has been scarcely investigated. The aim of this study was to cross-sectionally and longitudinally explore the relationships between CQI, fecal microbiota, and cardiometabolic risk factors in an elderly Mediterranean population at high cardiovascular risk. At baseline and 1-year, CQI was assessed from food frequency questionnaires data, cardiometabolic risk factors were measured, and fecal microbiota profiled from 16S sequencing. Multivariable-adjusted linear regression models were fitted to assess the associations between tertiles of baseline CQI, fecal microbiota, and cardiometabolic risk factors at baseline, and between tertiles of 1-year change in CQI, 1-year change in fecal microbiota and cardiometabolic risk factors. Cross-sectionally, higher CQI was positively associated with Shannon alpha diversity index, and abundance of genera Faecalibacterium and Christensenellaceae R7 group, and negatively associated with the abundance of Odoribacter, and uncultured Rhodospirillales genera. Some of these genera were associated with higher glycated hemoglobin and lower body mass index. In addition, we observed a positive association between CQI, and some pathways related with the metabolism of butyrate precursors and plants-origin molecules. Longitudinally, 1-year improvement in CQI was associated with a concurrent increase in the abundance of genera Butyrivibrio. Increased abundance of this genera was associated with 1-year improvement in insulin status. These observations suggest that a better quality of carbohydrate intake is associated with improved metabolic health, and this improvement could be modulated by greater alpha diversity and abundance of specific g
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- 2023
26. Association of monetary diet cost of foods and diet quality in Spanish older adults
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Bouzas, C; Pastor, R; Garcia, S; Monserrat-Mesquida, M; Martinez-Gonzalez, MA; Salas-Salvado, J; Corella, D; Schröder, H; Martinez, JA; Alonso-Gomez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Riquelme-Gallego, B; Romero-Secin, A; Pinto, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matia, P; Vidal, J; Zapatero, M; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Garcia-Arellano, A; Babio, N; Gonzalez-Monje, I; Castañer, O; Abete, I; Tojal-Sierra, L; Benavente-Marin, JC; Signes-Pastor, A; Konieczna, J; Garcia-Rios, A; Castro-Barquero, S; Fernandez-Garcia, JC; Santos-Lozano, JM; Bes-Rastrollo, M; Mestres, C; Guillem-Saiz, P; Goday, A; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Puig-Aguilo, E; Ruiz-Canela, M; Palau-Galindo, A; Fito, M; Tur, JA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Bouzas, C; Pastor, R; Garcia, S; Monserrat-Mesquida, M; Martinez-Gonzalez, MA; Salas-Salvado, J; Corella, D; Schröder, H; Martinez, JA; Alonso-Gomez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, L; Riquelme-Gallego, B; Romero-Secin, A; Pinto, X; Gaforio, JJ; Matia, P; Vidal, J; Zapatero, M; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Garcia-Arellano, A; Babio, N; Gonzalez-Monje, I; Castañer, O; Abete, I; Tojal-Sierra, L; Benavente-Marin, JC; Signes-Pastor, A; Konieczna, J; Garcia-Rios, A; Castro-Barquero, S; Fernandez-Garcia, JC; Santos-Lozano, JM; Bes-Rastrollo, M; Mestres, C; Guillem-Saiz, P; Goday, A; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Puig-Aguilo, E; Ruiz-Canela, M; Palau-Galindo, A; Fito, M; Tur, JA
- Abstract
Background: A major barrier to a healthy diet may be the higher price of healthy foods compared to low-quality foods. Objectives: This study aimed to assess the association between the monetary cost of food and diet quality in Spanish older adults at high risk of cardiovascular disease. Methods: Cross-sectional analysis was carried out in Spanish older adults (n = 6,838; 48.6% female). A validated food frequency questionnaire was used to assess dietary intake. Metabolic syndrome severity, adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MedDiet), adherence to a provegetarian dietary pattern, and dietary inflammatory index were assessed. The economic cost of the foods was obtained from the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food database (2015–2017, the period of time when the participants were recruited). The total cost of diet adjusted per 1,000 kcal was computed. Results: The healthier dietary pattern was associated with a higher cost of the diet. Higher adherence to the MedDiet, anti-inflammatory diet, and the healthy version of the provegetarian dietary pattern were related to higher costs of the diet. Conclusion: Higher diet quality was associated with a higher dietary cost of the diet per 1,000 kcal/day. Food prices can be an important component of interventions and policies aimed at improving people's diets and preventing diet-related chronic diseases. Clinical trial registry number: The trial was registered in 2014 at the International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial (ISRCT; http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN89898870) with the number 89898870.
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- 2023
27. How Did the COVID-19 Lockdown Pandemic Affect the Depression Symptomatology in Mediterranean Older Adults with Metabolic Syndrome?
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Paz-Graniel, I; Babio, N; Nishi, SK; Martinez-Gonzalez, MA; Corella, D; Fito, M; Martinez, A; Alonso-Gomez, AM; Warnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Santos-Lozano, JM; Serra-Majem, JL; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Sanchez, VM; Pinto, X; Delgado-Rodriguez, M; Matia-Martin, P; Vidal, J; Calderon-Sanchez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Fernandez-Aranda, F; Toledo, E; Valle-Hita, C; Sorli, JV; Lassale, C; Garcia-Rios, A; Oncina-Canovas, A; Baron-Lopez, FJ; Zulet, MA; Rayo, E; Casas, R; Thomas-Carazo, E; Tojal-Sierra, L; Damas-Fuentes, M; Ruiz-Canela, M; de las Heras-delgado, S; Fernandez-Carrion, R; Castaner, O; Pena-Orihuela, PJ; Gonzalez-Palacios, S; Buil-Cosiales, P; Goday, A; Salas-Salvado, J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Paz-Graniel, I; Babio, N; Nishi, SK; Martinez-Gonzalez, MA; Corella, D; Fito, M; Martinez, A; Alonso-Gomez, AM; Warnberg, J; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; Lopez-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Santos-Lozano, JM; Serra-Majem, JL; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Sanchez, VM; Pinto, X; Delgado-Rodriguez, M; Matia-Martin, P; Vidal, J; Calderon-Sanchez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Fernandez-Aranda, F; Toledo, E; Valle-Hita, C; Sorli, JV; Lassale, C; Garcia-Rios, A; Oncina-Canovas, A; Baron-Lopez, FJ; Zulet, MA; Rayo, E; Casas, R; Thomas-Carazo, E; Tojal-Sierra, L; Damas-Fuentes, M; Ruiz-Canela, M; de las Heras-delgado, S; Fernandez-Carrion, R; Castaner, O; Pena-Orihuela, PJ; Gonzalez-Palacios, S; Buil-Cosiales, P; Goday, A; Salas-Salvado, J
- Abstract
Background and Aims. To control the COVID-19 spread, in March 2020, a forced home lockdown was established in Spain. In the present study, we aimed to assess the effect of mobility and social COVID-19-established restrictions on depressive symptomatology in older adults with metabolic syndrome. We hypothesize that severe restrictions might have resulted in detrimental changes in depressive symptomatology. Methods. 2,312 PREDIMED-Plus study participants ( men = 53.9 %; mean age = 64.9 ± 4.8 years) who completed a COVID-19 lockdown questionnaire to assess the severity of restrictions/lockdown and the validated Spanish version of the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) during the three established phases concerning the COVID-19 lockdown in Spain (prelockdown, lockdown, and postlockdown) were included in this longitudinal analysis. Participants were categorized according to high or low lockdown severity. Analyses of covariance were performed to assess changes in depressive symptomatology across lockdown phases. Results. No significant differences in participant depression symptomatology changes were observed between lockdown severity categories (low/high) at the studied phases. During the lockdown phase, participants showed a decrease in BDI-II score compared to the prelockdown phase (mean (95% CI), -0.48 (-0.24, -0.72), P < 0.001 ); a nonsignificantly larger decrease was observed in participants allocated in the low-lockdown category (low: -0.59 (-0.95, -0.23), high: -0.43 (-0.67, -0.19)). Similar decreases in depression symptomatology were found for the physical environment dimension. The post- and prelockdown phase BDI-II scores were roughly similar. Conclusions. The COVID-19 pandemic lockdown was associated with a decrease in depressive symptomatology that returned to
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- 2023
28. Antioxidant and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitory activities of red lionfish (Pterois volitans L.) muscle protein hydrolysates obtained using pepsin-pancreatin system.
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Chuc-Koyoc, A., Chel-Guerrero, L., Sosa-Crespo, I., Betancur-Ancona, D., Vioque, J., and Gallegos-Tintoré, S.
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PTEROIS volitans ,ANGIOTENSIN converting enzyme ,MUSCLE proteins ,ANGIOTENSIN I ,PROTEIN hydrolysates ,PEPSIN ,AMINO acids - Abstract
Despite being an invasive species and representing a threat in the area, red lionfish (Pterois volitans L.) meat is valued for its pleasant taste and high protein content. The objective of the present work was to evaluate the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition (ACE-I) and the antioxidant activities of red lionfish muscle protein hydrolysates in vitro. Hydrolysates were obtained using the pepsin-pancreatin system, and their degree of hydrolysis (DH), electrophoretic, and amino acid profile were determined. Subsequently, their ACE-I and ABTS+ radical scavenging activity were evaluated, selecting those with the highest response. The highest DH (66.1%) was found in the hydrolysate obtained at 120 min of reaction time (H120); electrophoresis revealed the action of the enzymes on the muscle proteins. The highest bioactivities occurred during hydrolysis with pepsin for 60 min (H60), obtaining the highest ACE-I of 68.8% (evaluated with 500 µg protein) with a DH of 16.8%, ACE-I related amino acid content of 33.6%, and hydrophobic amino acid content of 42.9%. With the 30 min hydrolysates (H30), the highest Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity of 60.3 mM/mg protein was obtained with 18.4% DH and 22.1% radical scavenger amino acids; its comparison with H120 proved that higher DH did not produce a greater response in ABTS+ radical scavenging activity, DPPH, reducing power, and copper chelation assays; with ß-carotene bleaching being the exception. Therefore, it can be concluded that red lionfish muscle hydrolysates could be a promising source of peptides with antihypertensive and antioxidant properties, and can be suitable as functional ingredients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Effects of diabetes definition on global surveillance of diabetes prevalence and diagnosis: a pooled analysis of 96 population-based studies with 331 288 participants
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Danaei, G, Fahimi, S, Lu, Y, Zhou, B, Hajifathalian, K, Di Cesare, M, Lo, WC, Reis-Santos, B, Cowan, MJ, Shaw, JE, Bentham, J, Lin, JK, Bixby, H, Magliano, D, Bovet, P, Miranda, JJ, Khang, YH, Stevens, GA, Riley, LM, Ali, MK, Ezzati, M, Abdeen, ZA, Kadir, KA, Abu-Rmeileh, M, Acosta-Cazares, B, Aekplakorn, W, Aguilar-Salinas, CA, Ahmadvand, A, Al Nsour, M, Alkerwi, A, Amouyel, P, Andersen, LB, Anderssen, SA, Andrade, DS, Anjana, RM, Aounallah-Skhiri, H, Aris, T, Arlappa, N, Arveiler, D, Assah, FK, Avdicová, M, Balakrishna, N, Bandosz, P, Barbagallo, CM, Barceló, A, Batieha, AM, Baur, LA, Ben Romdhane, H, Bernabe-Ortiz, A, Bhargava, SK, Bi, Y, Bjerregaard, P, Björkelund, C, Blake, M, Blokstra, A, Bo, S, Boehm, BO, Boissonnet, CP, Brajkovich, I, Breckenkamp, J, Brewster, LM, Brian, GR, Bruno, G, Bugge, A, Cabrera de León, A, Can, G, Cândido, AP, Capuano, V, Carvalho, MJ, Casanueva, FF, Caserta, CA, Castetbon, K, Chamukuttan, S, Chaturvedi, N, Chen, CJ, Chen, F, Chen, S, Cheng, CY, Chetrit, A, Chiou, ST, Cho, Y, Chudek, J, Cifkova, R, Claessens, F, Concin, H, Cooper, C, Cooper, R, Costanzo, S, Cottel, D, Cowell, C, Crujeiras, AB, D'Arrigo, G, Dallongeville, J, Dankner, R, Dauchet, L, de Gaetano, G, De Henauw, S, Deepa, M, Dehghan, A, Dhana, K, Di Castelnuovo, AF, Djalalinia, S, Doua, K, Drygas, W, Du, Y, Egbagbe, EE, Eggertsen, R, El Ati, J, Elosua, R, Erasmus, RT, Erem, C, Ergor, G, Eriksen, L, Escobedo-de la Peña, J, Fall, CH, Farzadfar, F, Felix-Redondo, FJ, Ferguson, TS, Fernández-Bergés, D, Ferrari, M, Ferreccio, C, Finn, JD, Föger, B, Foo, LH, Fouad, HM, Francis, DK, Franco Mdo, C, Frontera, G, Furusawa, T, Gaciong, Z, Galbarczyk, A, Garnett, SP, Gaspoz, JM, Gasull, M, Gates, L, Geleijnse, JM, Ghasemain, A, Giampaoli, S, Gianfagna, F, Giovannelli, J, Gonzalez Gross, M, González Rivas, JP, Gorbea, MB, Gottrand, F, Grant, JF, Grodzicki, T, Grøntved, A, Gruden, G, Gu, D, Guan, OP, Guerrero, R, Guessous, I, Guimaraes, AL, Gutierrez, L, Hardy, R, Hari Kumar, R, Heidemann, C, Hihtaniemi, IT, Ho, SY, Ho, SC, Hofman, A, Horimoto, AR, Hormiga, CM, Horta, BL, Houti, L, Hussieni, AS, Huybrechts, I, Hwalla, N, Iacoviello, L, Iannone, AG, Ibrahim, MM, Ikeda, N, Ikram, MA, Irazola, VE, Islam, M, Iwasaki, M, Jacobs, JM, Jafar, T, Jasienska, G, Jiang, CQ, Jonas, JB, Joshi, P, Kafatos, A, Kalter-Leibovici, O, Kasaeian, A, Katz, J, Kaur, P, Kavousi, M, Kelishadi, R, Kengne, AP, Kersting, M, Khader, YS, Kiechl, S, Kim, J, Kiyohara, Y, Kolsteren, P, Korrovits, P, Koskinen, S, Kratzer, W, Kromhout, D, Kula, K, Kurjata, P, Kyobutungi, C, Lachat, C, Laid, Y, Lam, TH, Lanska, V, Lappas, G, Laxmaiah, A, Leclercq, C, Lee, J, Lehtimäki, T, Lekhraj, R, León-Muñoz, LM, Li, Y, Lim, WY, Lima-Costa, MF, Lin, HH, Lin, X, Lissner, L, Lorbeer, R, Lozano, JE, Lundqvist, A, Lytsy, P, Ma, G, Machado-Coelho, GL, Machi, S, Maggi, S, Makdisse, M, Mallikharjuna v, K, Manios, Y, Manzato, E, Margozzini, P, Marques-Vidal, P, Martorell, R, Masoodi, SR, Matsha, TE, Mbanya, JC, McFarlane, SR, McGarvey, ST, McLachlan, S, McNulty, BA, Mediene-Benchekor, S, Meirhaeghe, A, Menezes, AM, Merat, S, Meshram, II, Mi, J, Miquel, JF, Mohamed, MK, Mohammad, K, Mohan, V, Mohd Yusoff, MF, Møller, NC, Molnar, D, Mondo, CK, Moreno, LA, Morgan, K, Moschonis, G, Mossakowska, M, Mostafa, A, Mota, J, Muiesan, ML, Müller-Nurasyid, M, Mursu, J, Nagel, G, Námešná, J, Nang, EE, Nangia, VB, Navarrete-Muñoz, EM, Ndiaye, NC, Nervi, F, Nguyen, ND, Nieto-Martínez, RE, Alvarado, L, Ning, G, Ninomiya, T, Noale, M, Noto, D, Ochoa-Avilés, M, Oh, K, Onat, A, Osmond, C, Otero, JA, Palmieri, L, Panda-Jonas, S, Panza, F, Parsaeian, M, Peixoto, SV, Pereira, AC, Peters, A, Peykari, N, Pilav, A, Pitakaka, F, Piwonska, A, Piwonski, J, Plans-Rubió, P, Porta, M, Portegies, ML, Poustchi, H, Pradeepa, R, Price, JF, Punab, M, Qasrawi, RF, Qorbani, M, Raitakari, O, Ramachandra Rao, S, Ramachandran, A, Ramos, R, Rampal, S, Rathmann, W, Redon, J, Reganit, PF, Rigo, F, Robinson, SM, Robitaille, C, Rodríguez, LA, Rodríguez-Artalejo, F, del Cristo Rodriguez-Perez, M, Rojas-Martinez, R, Romaguera, D, Rosengren, A, Rubinstein, A, Rui, O, Ruiz-Betancourt, BS, Rutkowski, M, Sabanayagam, C, Sachdev, HS, Saidi, O, Sakarya, S, Salanave, B, Salonen, JT, Salvetti, M, Sánchez-Abanto, J, Santos, RN, Santos, R, Sardinha, LB, Scazufca, M, Schargrodsky, H, Scheidt-Nave, C, Shibuya, K, Shin, Y, Shiri, R, Siantar, R, Sibai, AM, Simon, M, Simons, J, Simons, LA, Sjostrom, M, Slowikowska-Hilczer, J, Slusarczyk, P, Smeeth, L, Snijder, MB, Solfrizzi, V, Sonestedt, E, Soumare, A, Staessen, JA, Steene-Johannessen, J, Stehle, P, Stein, AD, Stessman, J, Stöckl, D, Stokwiszewski, J, Strufaldi, MW, Sun, CA, Sundström, J, Suriyawongpaisal, P, Sy, RG, Tai, ES, Tarawneh, M, Tarqui-Mamani, CB, Thijs, L, Tolstrup, JS, Topbas, M, Torrent, M, Traissac, P, Trinh, OT, Tulloch-Reid, MK, Tuomainen, TP, Turley, ML, Tzourio, C, Ueda, P, Ukoli, FM, Ulmer, H, Valdivia, G, van Valkengoed, IG, Vanderschueren, D, Vanuzzo, D, Vega, T, Velasquez-Melendez, G, Veronesi, G, Verschuren, M, Vioque, J, Virtanen, J, Visvikis-Siest, S, Viswanathan, B, Vollenweider, P, Voutilainen, S, Wade, AN, Wagner, A, Walton, J, Mohamud, WN, Wang, MD, Wang, YX, Wannamethee, SG, Weerasekera, D, Whincup, PH, Widhalm, K, Wiecek, A, Wilks, RJ, Willeit, J, Wojtyniak, B, Wong, TY, Woo, J, Woodward, M, Wu, AG, Wu, FC, Wu, SL, Xu, H, Yang, X, Ye, X, Yoshihara, A, Younger-Coleman, NO, Zambon, S, Zargar, AH, Zdrojewski, T, Zhao, W, and Zheng, Y
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30. One-year longitudinal association between changes in dietary choline or betaine intake association with cardiometabolic variables in the PREDIMED-Plus trial
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Díez-Ricote L, San-Cristobal R, Concejo MJ, Martínez-González MÁ, Corella D, Salas-Salvadó J, Goday A, Martínez JA, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Wärnberg J, Vioque J, Romaguera D, López-Miranda J, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Lapetra J, Serra-Majem JL, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Tur JA, Sánchez VM, Pintó X, Gaforio JJ, Matía-Martín P, Vidal J, Fontao SM, Ros E, Vázquez-Ruiz Z, Ortega-Azorín C, García-Gavilán JF, Malcampo M, Martínez-Urbistondo D, Tojal-Sierra L, Rodríguez AG, Gómez-Bellvert N, Chaplin A, García-Ríos A, Bernal-López RM, Santos-Lozano JM, Basterra-Gortari J, Sorlí JV, Murphy M, Gasulla G, Micó V, Salaverria-Lete I, Ochandorena EG, Babio N, Herraiz X, Ordovás JM, and Daimiel L
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cardiovascular risk ,choline ,Mediterranean diet ,renal variables ,betaine ,cardiometabolic parameters - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Choline and betaine intake have been related to cardiovascular health. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to explore the relationship between 1-year changes in dietary intake of choline or betaine and 1-year changes in cardiometabolic and renal function traits within the frame of the PREDIMED-Plus trial. DESIGN: We used baseline and 1 year follow-up data from 5,613 participants (48.2% female and 51.8% male, mean age 65.01 ± 4.91) to assess cardiometabolic traits, and 3,367 participants to assess renal function, of the Spanish PREDIMED-Plus ("PREvention with MEDiterranean DIet") trial. Participants met at least three criteria of metabolic syndrome (MetS) and had overweight or obesity (BMI =27 and =40kg/m2). These criteria were similar to those of the PREDIMED parent study. Dietary intake of choline and betaine was estimated from the Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ). RESULTS: The greatest one-year increase in dietary choline or betaine intake (Q4) was associated with improved serum glucose (-3.39 and -2.72 mg/dL for choline or betaine, respectively) and glycated hemoglobin levels (-0.10% for Q4 of either choline or betaine intake increase). Other significant changes associated with the greatest increase in choline or betaine intake were: reduced body weight (-2.93 and -2.78 Kg, respectively), BMI (-1.05 and -0.99 Kg/m2, respectively), waist circumference (-3.37 and -3.26 cm, respectively), total cholesterol (-4.74 and -4.52 mg/dL, respectively) and LDL cholesterol (-4.30 and -4.16 mg/dL, respectively). Urine creatinine was reduced in Q4 of one-year increase in choline or betaine intake (-5.42 and -5.74 mg/dL, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Increase in dietary choline or betaine intake were longitudinally related to improvements in cardiometabolic parameters. Markers of renal function were also slightly improved, and they required further investigation.
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- 2022
31. Iodine intake in a population of pregnant women: INMA mother and child cohort study, Spain
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the INMA Study Group, Murcia, M, Rebagliato, M, Espada, M, Vioque, J, Marina, L Santa, Alvarez-Pedrerol, M, Lopez-Espinosa, M-J, León, G, Íñiguez, C, Basterrechea, M, Guxens, M, Lertxundi, A, Perales, A, Ballester, F, and Sunyer, J
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- 2010
32. The Association between Peptic Ulcer Disease and Gastric Cancer: Results from the Stomach Cancer Pooling (StoP) Project Consortium
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Paragomi, P. Dabo, B. Pelucchi, C. Bonzi, R. Bako, A.T. Sanusi, N.M. Nguyen, Q.H. Zhang, Z.-F. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Vu, K.T. Yu, G.-P. Turati, F. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Hu, J. Mu, L. Boccia, S. Pastorino, R. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Kurtz, R.C. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Camargo, M.C. Curado, M.P. Lunet, N. Vioque, J. Boffetta, P. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. Luu, H.N. and Paragomi, P. Dabo, B. Pelucchi, C. Bonzi, R. Bako, A.T. Sanusi, N.M. Nguyen, Q.H. Zhang, Z.-F. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Vu, K.T. Yu, G.-P. Turati, F. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Hu, J. Mu, L. Boccia, S. Pastorino, R. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Kurtz, R.C. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Camargo, M.C. Curado, M.P. Lunet, N. Vioque, J. Boffetta, P. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. Luu, H.N.
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Background. Gastric cancer (GC) is the fifth most common type of cancer and the fourth most common cause of cancer-related mortality. Although the risk of GC and peptic ulcer disease (PUD) is known to be increased by H. pylori infection, evidence regarding the direct relationship between PUD and GC across ethnicities is inconclusive. Therefore, we investigated the association between PUD and GC in the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) consortium. Methods. History of peptic ulcer disease was collected using a structured questionnaire in 11 studies in the StoP consortium, including 4106 GC cases and 6922 controls. The two-stage individual-participant data meta-analysis approach was adopted to generate a priori. Unconditional logistic regression and Firth’s penalized maximum likelihood estimator were used to calculate study-specific odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the association between gastric ulcer (GU)/duodenal ulcer (DU) and risk of GC. Results. History of GU and DU was thoroughly reported and used in association analysis, respectively, by 487 cases (12.5%) and 276 controls (4.1%), and 253 cases (7.8%) and 318 controls (6.0%). We found that GU was associated with an increased risk of GC (OR = 3.04, 95% CI: 2.07–4.49). No association between DU and GC risk was observed (OR = 1.03, 95% CI: 0.77–1.39). Conclusions. In the pooled analysis of 11 case–control studies in a large consortium (i.e., the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) consortium), we found a positive association between GU and risk of GC and no association between DU and GC risk. © 2022 by the authors.
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- 2022
33. Tea consumption and gastric cancer: a pooled analysis from the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) Project consortium
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Martimianaki, G. Alicandro, G. Pelucchi, C. Bonzi, R. Rota, M. Hu, J. Johnson, K.C. Rabkin, C.S. Liao, L.M. Sinha, R. Zhang, Z.-F. Dalmartello, M. Lunet, N. Morais, S. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Yu, G.-P. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Curado, M.P. Dias-Neto, E. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Vioque, J. Garcia de la Hera, M. López-Carrillo, L. Hernández-Ramírez, R.U. Hamada, G.S. Ward, M.H. Mu, L. Malekzadeh, R. Pourfarzi, F. Trichopoulou, A. Karakatsani, A. Kurtz, R.C. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Boccia, S. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. and Martimianaki, G. Alicandro, G. Pelucchi, C. Bonzi, R. Rota, M. Hu, J. Johnson, K.C. Rabkin, C.S. Liao, L.M. Sinha, R. Zhang, Z.-F. Dalmartello, M. Lunet, N. Morais, S. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Yu, G.-P. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Curado, M.P. Dias-Neto, E. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Vioque, J. Garcia de la Hera, M. López-Carrillo, L. Hernández-Ramírez, R.U. Hamada, G.S. Ward, M.H. Mu, L. Malekzadeh, R. Pourfarzi, F. Trichopoulou, A. Karakatsani, A. Kurtz, R.C. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Boccia, S. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C.
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Background: Evidence from epidemiological studies on the role of tea drinking in gastric cancer risk remains inconsistent. We aimed to investigate and quantify the relationship between tea consumption and gastric cancer in the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) Project consortium. Methods: A total of 9438 cases and 20,451 controls from 22 studies worldwide were included. Odds ratios (ORs) and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of gastric cancer for regular versus non-regular tea drinkers were estimated by one and two-stage modelling analyses, including terms for sex, age and the main recognised risk factors for gastric cancer. Results: Compared to non-regular drinkers, the estimated adjusted pooled OR for regular tea drinkers was 0.91 (95% CI: 0.85–0.97). When the amount of tea consumed was considered, the OR for consumption of 1–2 cups/day was 1.01 (95% CI: 0.94–1.09) and for >3 cups/day was 0.91 (95% CI: 0.80–1.03). Stronger inverse associations emerged among regular drinkers in China and Japan (OR: 0.67, 95% CI: 0.49–0.91) where green tea is consumed, in subjects with H. pylori infection (OR: 0.68, 95% CI: 0.58–0.80), and for gastric cardia cancer (OR: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.49–0.84). Conclusion: Our results indicate a weak inverse association between tea consumption and gastric cancer. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
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- 2022
34. Allium vegetables intake and the risk of gastric cancer in the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) Project
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Dalmartello, M. Turati, F. Zhang, Z.-F. Lunet, N. Rota, M. Bonzi, R. Galeone, C. Martimianaki, G. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Yu, G.-P. Morais, S. Malekzadeh, R. López-Carrillo, L. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Aragonés, N. Fernández-Tardón, G. Martin, V. Vioque, J. Garcia de la Hera, M. Curado, M.P. Coimbra, F.J.F. Assumpcao, P. Pakseresht, M. Hu, J. Hernández-Ramírez, R.U. Ward, M.H. Pourfarzi, F. Mu, L. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Lagiou, P. Lagiou, A. Trichopoulou, A. Karakatsani, A. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. Pelucchi, C. and Dalmartello, M. Turati, F. Zhang, Z.-F. Lunet, N. Rota, M. Bonzi, R. Galeone, C. Martimianaki, G. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Yu, G.-P. Morais, S. Malekzadeh, R. López-Carrillo, L. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Aragonés, N. Fernández-Tardón, G. Martin, V. Vioque, J. Garcia de la Hera, M. Curado, M.P. Coimbra, F.J.F. Assumpcao, P. Pakseresht, M. Hu, J. Hernández-Ramírez, R.U. Ward, M.H. Pourfarzi, F. Mu, L. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Lagiou, P. Lagiou, A. Trichopoulou, A. Karakatsani, A. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. Pelucchi, C.
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Background: The role of allium vegetables on gastric cancer (GC) risk remains unclear. Methods: We evaluated whether higher intakes of allium vegetables reduce GC risk using individual participant data from 17 studies participating in the “Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) Project”, including 6097 GC cases and 13,017 controls. Study-specific odds ratios (ORs) were pooled using a two-stage modelling approach. Results: Total allium vegetables intake was inversely associated with GC risk. The pooled OR for the highest versus the lowest study-specific tertile of consumption was 0.71 (95% confidence interval, CI, 0.56–0.90), with substantial heterogeneity across studies (I2 > 50%). Pooled ORs for high versus low consumption were 0.69 (95% CI, 0.55–0.86) for onions and 0.83 (95% CI, 0.75–0.93) for garlic. The inverse association with allium vegetables was evident in Asian (OR 0.50, 95% CI, 0.29–0.86) but not European (OR 0.96, 95% CI, 0.81–1.13) and American (OR 0.66, 95% CI, 0.39–1.11) studies. Results were consistent across all other strata. Conclusions: In a worldwide consortium of epidemiological studies, we found an inverse association between allium vegetables and GC, with a stronger association seen in Asian studies. The heterogeneity of results across geographic regions and possible residual confounding suggest caution in results interpretation. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
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- 2022
35. Salt intake and gastric cancer: a pooled analysis within the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) Project
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Morais, S. Costa, A. Albuquerque, G. Araújo, N. Pelucchi, C. Rabkin, C.S. Liao, L.M. Sinha, R. Zhang, Z.-F. Hu, J. Johnson, K.C. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Bonzi, R. Yu, G.-P. López-Carrillo, L. Malekzadeh, R. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Hamada, G.S. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Vioque, J. de la Hera, M.G. Moreno, V. Vanaclocha-Espi, M. Ward, M.H. Pakseresht, M. Hernández-Ramirez, R.U. López-Cervantes, M. Pourfarzi, F. Mu, L. Kurtz, R.C. Boccia, S. Pastorino, R. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Curado, M.P. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. Lunet, N. and Morais, S. Costa, A. Albuquerque, G. Araújo, N. Pelucchi, C. Rabkin, C.S. Liao, L.M. Sinha, R. Zhang, Z.-F. Hu, J. Johnson, K.C. Palli, D. Ferraroni, M. Bonzi, R. Yu, G.-P. López-Carrillo, L. Malekzadeh, R. Tsugane, S. Hidaka, A. Hamada, G.S. Zaridze, D. Maximovitch, D. Vioque, J. de la Hera, M.G. Moreno, V. Vanaclocha-Espi, M. Ward, M.H. Pakseresht, M. Hernández-Ramirez, R.U. López-Cervantes, M. Pourfarzi, F. Mu, L. Kurtz, R.C. Boccia, S. Pastorino, R. Lagiou, A. Lagiou, P. Boffetta, P. Camargo, M.C. Curado, M.P. Negri, E. La Vecchia, C. Lunet, N.
- Abstract
Purpose: Previous studies show that consuming foods preserved by salting increases the risk of gastric cancer, while results on the association between total salt or added salt and gastric cancer are less consistent and vary with the exposure considered. This study aimed to quantify the association between dietary salt exposure and gastric cancer, using an individual participant data meta-analysis of studies participating in the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) Project. Methods: Data from 25 studies (10,283 cases and 24,643 controls) from the StoP Project with information on salt taste preference (tasteless, normal, salty), use of table salt (never, sometimes, always), total sodium intake (tertiles of grams/day), and high-salt and salt-preserved foods intake (tertiles of grams/day) were used. A two-stage approach based on random-effects models was used to pool study-specific adjusted (sex, age, and gastric cancer risk factors) odds ratios (aORs), and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Results: Gastric cancer risk was higher for salty taste preference (aOR 1.59, 95% CI 1.25–2.03), always using table salt (aOR 1.33, 95% CI 1.16–1.54), and for the highest tertile of high-salt and salt-preserved foods intake (aOR 1.24, 95% CI 1.01–1.51) vs. the lowest tertile. No significant association was observed for the highest vs. the lowest tertile of total sodium intake (aOR 1.08, 95% CI 0.82–1.43). The results obtained were consistent across anatomic sites, strata of Helicobacter pylori infection, and sociodemographic, lifestyle and study characteristics. Conclusion: Salty taste preference, always using table salt, and a greater high-salt and salt-preserved foods intake increased the risk of gastric cancer, though the association was less robust with total sodium intake. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
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- 2022
36. Taxonomic and Functional Fecal Microbiota Signatures Associated With Insulin Resistance in Non-Diabetic Subjects With Overweight/Obesity Within the Frame of the PREDIMED-Plus Study
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Atzeni A; Bastiaanssen TFS; Cryan JF; Tinahones FJ; Vioque J; Corella D; Fitó M; Vidal J; Moreno-Indias I; Gómez-Pérez AM; Torres-Collado L; Coltell O; Castañer O; Bulló M; Salas-Salvadó J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Atzeni A; Bastiaanssen TFS; Cryan JF; Tinahones FJ; Vioque J; Corella D; Fitó M; Vidal J; Moreno-Indias I; Gómez-Pérez AM; Torres-Collado L; Coltell O; Castañer O; Bulló M; Salas-Salvadó J
- Abstract
Objective: An altered gut microbiota has been associated with insulin resistance, a metabolic dysfunction consisting of cellular insulin signaling impairment. The aim of the present study is to determine the taxonomic and functional fecal microbiota signatures associated with HOMA-IR index in a population with high cardiovascular risk. Methods: A total of 279 non-diabetic individuals (55–75 years aged) with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome were stratified according to tertiles of HOMA-IR index. Blood biochemical parameters, anthropometric measurements and fecal samples were collected at baseline. Fecal microbial DNA extraction, 16S amplicon sequencing and bioinformatics analysis were performed. Results: Desulfovibrio, Odoribacter and Oscillospiraceae UCG-002 were negatively associated with HOMA-IR index, whereas predicted total functional abundances revealed gut metabolic modules mainly linked to amino acid degradation. Butyricicoccus, Erysipelotrichaceae UCG-003, Faecalibacterium were positively associated with HOMA-IR index, whereas predicted total functional abundances revealed gut metabolic modules mainly linked to saccharide degradation. These bacteria contribute differentially to the gut metabolic modules, being the degree of contribution dependent on insulin resistance. Both taxa and gut metabolic modules negatively associated to HOMA-IR index were linked to mechanisms involving sulfate reducing bacteria, improvement of intestinal gluconeogenesis and production of acetate. Furthermore, both taxa and gut metabolic modules positively associated to HOMA-IR index were linked to production and mechanisms of action of butyrate. Conclusions: Specific taxonomic and functional fecal microbiota signatures associated with insulin resistance were identified in a non
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- 2022
37. Integrative development of a short screening questionnaire of highly processed food consumption (sQ-HPF)
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Martinez-Perez C; Daimiel L; Climent-Mainar C; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Schröder H; Martinez JA; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Sánchez VM; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Ros E; Basterra J; Babio N; Guillem-Saiz P; Zomeño MD; Abete I; Vaquero-Luna J; Barón-López FJ; Gonzalez-Palacios S; Konieczna J; Garcia-Rios A; Bernal-López MR; Santos-Lozano JM; Bes-Rastrollo M; Khoury N; Saiz C; Pérez-Vega KA; Zulet MA; Tojal-Sierra L; Ruiz ZV; Martinez MA; Malcampo M; Ordovás JM; San-Cristobal R, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Martinez-Perez C; Daimiel L; Climent-Mainar C; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Schröder H; Martinez JA; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Sánchez VM; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Ros E; Basterra J; Babio N; Guillem-Saiz P; Zomeño MD; Abete I; Vaquero-Luna J; Barón-López FJ; Gonzalez-Palacios S; Konieczna J; Garcia-Rios A; Bernal-López MR; Santos-Lozano JM; Bes-Rastrollo M; Khoury N; Saiz C; Pérez-Vega KA; Zulet MA; Tojal-Sierra L; Ruiz ZV; Martinez MA; Malcampo M; Ordovás JM; San-Cristobal R
- Abstract
Recent lifestyle changes include increased consumption of highly processed foods (HPF), which has been associated with an increased risk of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). However, nutritional information relies on the estimation of HPF consumption from food-frequency questionnaires (FFQ) that are not explicitly developed for this purpose. We aimed to develop a short screening questionnaire of HPF consumption (sQ-HPF) that integrates criteria from the existing food classification systems.Data from 4400 participants (48.1% female and 51.9% male, 64.9 ± 4.9 years) of the Spanish PREDIMED-Plus ("PREvention with MEDiterranean DIet") trial were used for this analysis. Items from the FFQ were classified according to four main food processing-based classification systems (NOVA, IARC, IFIC and UNC). Participants were classified into tertiles of HPF consumption according to each system. Using binomial logistic regression, food groups associated with agreement in the highest tertile for at least two classification systems were chosen as items for the questionnaire. ROC analysis was used to determine cut-off points for the frequency of consumption of each item, from which a score was calculated. Internal consistency of the questionnaire was assessed through exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and Cronbach's analysis, and agreement with the four classifications was assessed with weighted kappa coefficients.Regression analysis identified 14 food groups (items) associated with high HPF consumption for at least two classification systems. EFA showed that items were representative contributors of a single underlying factor, the "HPF dietary pattern" (factor loadings around 0.2). We constructed a questionnaire asking about the frequency of consumption of those items. The threshold frequ
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- 2022
38. Contribution of cardio-vascular risk factors to depressive status in the PREDIMED-PLUS Trial. A cross-sectional and a 2-year longitudinal study
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Martín-Peláez S; Serra-Majem L; Cano-Ibáñez N; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Lassale C; Martínez JA; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Fernández-Aranda F; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Martín V; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Daimiel L; Ros E; Toledo E; Nishi SK; Sorli JV; Malcampo M; Zulet MÁ; Moreno-Rodríguez A; Cueto-Galán R; Vivancos-Aparicio D; Colom A; García-Ríos A; Casas R; Bernal-López MR; Santos-Lozano JM; Vázquez Z; Gómez-Martínez C; Ortega-Azorín C; del Val JL; Abete I; Goikoetxea-Bahon A; Pascual E; Becerra-Tomás N; Chillarón JJ; Sánchez-Villegas A, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Martín-Peláez S; Serra-Majem L; Cano-Ibáñez N; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Lassale C; Martínez JA; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Fernández-Aranda F; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Martín V; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Daimiel L; Ros E; Toledo E; Nishi SK; Sorli JV; Malcampo M; Zulet MÁ; Moreno-Rodríguez A; Cueto-Galán R; Vivancos-Aparicio D; Colom A; García-Ríos A; Casas R; Bernal-López MR; Santos-Lozano JM; Vázquez Z; Gómez-Martínez C; Ortega-Azorín C; del Val JL; Abete I; Goikoetxea-Bahon A; Pascual E; Becerra-Tomás N; Chillarón JJ; Sánchez-Villegas A
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Background Cardio-vascular disease and depression are thought to be closely related, due to shared risk factors. The aim of the study was to determine the association between cardio-vascular risk (CVR) factors and depressive status in a population (55–75 years) with metabolic syndrome (MetS) from the PREDIMED-Plus trial. Methods and findings Participants were classified into three groups of CVR according to the Framingham-based REGICOR function: (1) low (LR), (2) medium (MR) or (3) high/very high (HR). The Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) was used to assess depressive symptoms at baseline and after 2 years. The association between CVR and depressive status at baseline (n = 6545), and their changes after 2 years (n = 4566) were evaluated through multivariable regression models (logistic and linear models). HR women showed higher odds of depressive status than LR [OR (95% CI) = 1.78 (1.26, 2.50)]. MR and HR participants with total cholesterol <160 mg/mL showed higher odds of depression than LR [OR (95% CI) = 1.77 (1.13, 2.77) and 2.83 (1.25, 6.42) respectively)] but those with total cholesterol ≥280 mg/mL showed lower odds of depression than LR [OR (95% CI) = 0.26 (0.07, 0.98) and 0.23 (0.05, 0.95), respectively]. All participants decreased their BDI-II score after 2 years, being the decrease smaller in MR and HR diabetic compared to LR [adjusted mean±SE = -0.52±0.20, -0.41 ±0.27 and -1.25±0.31 respectively). MR and HR participants with total cholesterol between 240–279 mg/mL showed greater decreases in the BDI-II score compared to LR (adjusted mean±SE = -0.83±0.37, -0.77±0.64 and 0.97±0.52 respectively). Conclusions Improving cardiovascular health could prevent the onset of depression in the elderly. Diabetes and total cholesterol in individuals at high CVR, may pla
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- 2022
39. Dairy Product Consumption and Changes in Cognitive Performance: Two-Year Analysis of the PREDIMED-Plus Cohort
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Ni, JQ; Nishi, SK; Babio, N; Martínez-González, MA; Corella, D; Castañer, O; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Gómez-Gracia, E; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, JL; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Martín-Sánchez, V; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Bustelo, AB; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Toledo, E; Coltell, O; Gómez-Martínez, C; Zomeño, MD; Donat-Vargas, C; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Bouzas, C; Garcia-de-la-Hera, M; Chaplin, A; Garcia-Rios, A; Casas, R; Cornejo-Pareja, I; Santos-Lozano, JM; Rognoni, T; Saiz, C; Paz-Ganiel, I; Malcampo, M; Sánchez-Villegas, A; Salaverria-Lete, I; García-Arellano, A; Schröder, H; Salas-Salvadó, J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Ni, JQ; Nishi, SK; Babio, N; Martínez-González, MA; Corella, D; Castañer, O; Martínez, JA; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Gómez-Gracia, E; Vioque, J; Romaguera, D; López-Miranda, J; Estruch, R; Tinahones, FJ; Lapetra, J; Serra-Majem, JL; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Tur, JA; Martín-Sánchez, V; Pintó, X; Gaforio, JJ; Bustelo, AB; Vidal, J; Vázquez, C; Daimiel, L; Ros, E; Toledo, E; Coltell, O; Gómez-Martínez, C; Zomeño, MD; Donat-Vargas, C; Goicolea-Güemez, L; Bouzas, C; Garcia-de-la-Hera, M; Chaplin, A; Garcia-Rios, A; Casas, R; Cornejo-Pareja, I; Santos-Lozano, JM; Rognoni, T; Saiz, C; Paz-Ganiel, I; Malcampo, M; Sánchez-Villegas, A; Salaverria-Lete, I; García-Arellano, A; Schröder, H; Salas-Salvadó, J
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Scope Dairy consumption has been suggested to impact cognition; however, evidence is limited and inconsistent. This study aims to longitudinally assess the association between dairy consumption with cognitive changes in an older Spanish population at high cardiovascular disease risk. Methods and results Four thousand six hundred sixty eight participants aged 55-75 years, completed a validated food frequency questionnaire at baseline and a neuropsychological battery of tests at baseline and 2-year follow-up. Multivariable linear regression models are used, scaled by 100 (i.e., the units of beta correspond to 1 SD/100), to assess associations between baseline tertile daily consumption and 2-year changes in cognitive performance. Participants in the highest tertile of total milk and whole-fat milk consumption have a greater decline in global cognitive function (beta: -4.71, 95% CI: -8.74 to -0.69, p-trend = 0.020 and beta: -6.64, 95% CI: -10.81 to -2.47, p-trend = 0.002, respectively) compared to those in the lowest tertile. No associations are observed between low fat milk, yogurt, cheese or fermented dairy consumption, and changes in cognitive performance. Conclusion Results suggest there are no clear prospective associations between consumption of most commonly consumed dairy products and cognition, although there may be an association with a greater rate of cognitive decline over a 2-year period in older adults at high cardiovascular disease risk for whole-fat milk.
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- 2022
40. Circulating carotenoids are associated with favorable lipid and fatty acid profiles in an older population at high cardiovascular risk
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Marhuenda-Muñoz M; Domínguez-López I; Langohr K; Tresserra-Rimbau A; Martínez González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Zomeño MD; Martínez JA; Alonso-Gómez AM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Martín-Sánchez V; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Daimiel L; Ros E; Toledo E; Fernández de la Puente Cervera M; Barragán R; Fitó M; Tojal-Sierra L; Gómez-Gracia E; Zazo JM; Morey M; García-Ríos A; Casas R; Gómez-Pérez AM; Santos-Lozano JM; Vázquez-Ruiz Z; Atzeni A; Asensio EM; Gili-Riu MM; Bullon V; Moreno-Rodriguez A; Lecea O; Babio N; Peñas Lopez F; Gómez Melis G; Lamuela-Raventós RM, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Marhuenda-Muñoz M; Domínguez-López I; Langohr K; Tresserra-Rimbau A; Martínez González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Zomeño MD; Martínez JA; Alonso-Gómez AM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Martín-Sánchez V; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Daimiel L; Ros E; Toledo E; Fernández de la Puente Cervera M; Barragán R; Fitó M; Tojal-Sierra L; Gómez-Gracia E; Zazo JM; Morey M; García-Ríos A; Casas R; Gómez-Pérez AM; Santos-Lozano JM; Vázquez-Ruiz Z; Atzeni A; Asensio EM; Gili-Riu MM; Bullon V; Moreno-Rodriguez A; Lecea O; Babio N; Peñas Lopez F; Gómez Melis G; Lamuela-Raventós RM
- Abstract
Carotenoid intake has been reported to be associated with improved cardiovascular health, but there is little information on actual plasma concentrations of these compounds as biomarkers of cardiometabolic risk. The objective was to investigate the association between circulating plasma carotenoids and different cardiometabolic risk factors and the plasma fatty acid profile. This is a cross-sectional evaluation of baseline data conducted in a subcohort (106 women and 124 men) of an ongoing multi-factorial lifestyle trial for primary cardiovascular prevention. Plasma concentrations of carotenoids were quantified by liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. The associations between carotenoid concentrations and cardiometabolic risk factors were assessed using regression models adapted for interval-censored variables. Carotenoid concentrations were cross-sectionally inversely associated with serum triglyceride concentrations [−2.79 mg/dl (95% CI: −4.25, −1.34) and −5.15 mg/dl (95% CI: −7.38, −2.93), p-values = 0.0002 and <0.00001 in women and men, respectively], lower levels of plasma saturated fatty acids [−0.09% (95% CI: −0.14, −0.03) and −0.15 % (95% CI: −0.23, −0.08), p-values = 0.001 and 0.0001 in women and men, respectively], and higher levels of plasma polyunsaturated fatty acids [(0.12 % (95% CI: −0.01, 0.25) and 0.39 % (95% CI: 0.19, 0.59), p-values = 0.065 and 0.0001 in women and men, respectively] in the whole population. Plasma carotenoid concentrations were also associated with higher plasma HDL-cholesterol in women [0.47 mg/dl (95% CI: 0.23, 0.72), p-value: 0.0002], and lower fasting plasma glucose in men [−1.35 mg/dl (95% CI: −2.12, −0.59), p-value: 0.001].
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- 2022
41. Adopting a High-Polyphenolic Diet Is Associated with an Improved Glucose Profile: Prospective Analysis within the PREDIMED-Plus Trial
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tresserra-Rimbau A; Castro-Barquero S; Becerra-Tomás N; Babio N; Martínez-González MÁ; Corella D; Fitó M; Romaguera D; Vioque J; Alonso-Gomez AM; Wärnberg J; Martínez JA; Serra-Majem L; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Pintó X; Tur JA; López-Miranda J; Cano-Ibáñez N; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Daimiel L; Sánchez VM; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Ros E; Basterra FJ; de la Puente MF; Asensio EM; Castañer O; Bullón-Vela V; Tojal-Sierra L; Gómez-Gracia E; Cases-Pérez E; Konieczna J; García-Ríos A; Casañas-Quintana T; Bernal-Lopez MR; Santos-Lozano JM; Esteve-Luque V; Bouzas C; Vázquez-Ruiz Z; Palau-Galindo A; Barragan R; Grau ML; Razquín C; Goicolea-Güemez L; Toledo E; Vergaz MV; Lamuela-Raventós RM; Salas-Salvadó J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Tresserra-Rimbau A; Castro-Barquero S; Becerra-Tomás N; Babio N; Martínez-González MÁ; Corella D; Fitó M; Romaguera D; Vioque J; Alonso-Gomez AM; Wärnberg J; Martínez JA; Serra-Majem L; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Pintó X; Tur JA; López-Miranda J; Cano-Ibáñez N; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Daimiel L; Sánchez VM; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Ros E; Basterra FJ; de la Puente MF; Asensio EM; Castañer O; Bullón-Vela V; Tojal-Sierra L; Gómez-Gracia E; Cases-Pérez E; Konieczna J; García-Ríos A; Casañas-Quintana T; Bernal-Lopez MR; Santos-Lozano JM; Esteve-Luque V; Bouzas C; Vázquez-Ruiz Z; Palau-Galindo A; Barragan R; Grau ML; Razquín C; Goicolea-Güemez L; Toledo E; Vergaz MV; Lamuela-Raventós RM; Salas-Salvadó J
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Previous studies suggested that dietary polyphenols could reduce the incidence and complications of type-2 diabetes (T2D); although the evidence is still limited and inconsistent. This work analyzes whether changing to a diet with a higher polyphenolic content is associated with an improved glucose profile. At baseline, and at 1 year of follow-up visits, 5921 participants (mean age 65.0 ± 4.9, 48.2% women) who had overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome filled out a vali-dated 143-item semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ), from which polyphenol intakes were calculated. Energy-adjusted total polyphenols and subclasses were categorized in tertiles of changes. Linear mixed-effect models with random intercepts (the recruitment centers) were used to assess associations between changes in polyphenol subclasses intake and 1-year plasma glucose or glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels. Increments in total polyphenol intake and some classes were inversely associated with better glucose levels and HbA1c after one year of follow-up. These associations were modified when the analyses were run considering diabetes status separately. To our knowledge, this is the first study to assess the relationship between changes in the intake of all polyphenolic groups and T2D-related parameters in a senior population with T2D or at high-risk of developing T2D.
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- 2022
42. Omega-3 Fatty Acid Intake during Pregnancy and Child Neuropsychological Development: A ulti-Centre Population-Based Birth Cohort Study in Spain
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tahaei H; Gignac F; Pinar A; Fernandez-Barrés S; Romaguera D; Vioque J; Santa-Marina L; Subiza-Pérez M; Llop S; Soler-Blasco R; Arija V; Salas-Salvadó J; Tardón A; Riaño-Galán I; Sunyer J; Guxens M; Julvez J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Tahaei H; Gignac F; Pinar A; Fernandez-Barrés S; Romaguera D; Vioque J; Santa-Marina L; Subiza-Pérez M; Llop S; Soler-Blasco R; Arija V; Salas-Salvadó J; Tardón A; Riaño-Galán I; Sunyer J; Guxens M; Julvez J
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Background: There are few studies that look at the intake of all types of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFAs) during the different stages of pregnancy along with a long-term neuropsychological follow-up of the child. This study aims to explore the association between maternal n-3 PUFA intake during two periods of pregnancy and the child’s neuropsychological scores at different ages. Methods: Prospective data were obtained for 2644 pregnant women recruited between 2004 and 2008 in population-based birth cohorts in Spain. Maternal n-3 PUFA intake during the first and third trimester of pregnancy was estimated using validated food frequency questionnaires. Child neuropsychological functions were assessed using Bayley Scales of Infant Development version one (BSID) at 1 year old, the McCarthy Scale of Children’s Abilities (MSCA) at 4 years old, and the Attention Network Test (ANT) at 7 years old. Data were analysed using multivariate linear regression models and adjusted for potential covariates, such as maternal social class, education, cohort location, alcohol consumption, smoking, breastfeeding duration, and energy intake. Results: Compared to participants in the lowest quartile (<1.262 g/week) of n-3 PUFA consumption during the first trimester, those in the highest quartile (>1.657 g/week) had a 2.26 points (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.41, 4.11) higher MSCA general cognitive score, a 2.48 points (95% CI: 0.53, 4.43) higher MSCA verbal score, and a 2.06 points (95% CI: 0.166, 3.95) higher MSCA executive function score, and a 11.52 milliseconds (95% CI:-22.95,-0.09) lower ANT hit reaction time standard error. In the third pregnancy trimester, the associations were weaker. Conclusions: Positive associations between n-3 PUFA intake during early pregnancy and
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- 2022
43. Morbid liver manifestations are intrinsically bound to metabolic syndrome and nutrient intake based on a machine-learning cluster analysis
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Micó V; San-Cristobal R; Martín R; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Fitó M; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem JL; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Martín Sánchez V; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; García-Arellano A; Pertusa-Martinez S; Chaplin A; Garcia-Rios A; Muñoz Bravo C; Schröder H; Babio N; Sorli JV; Gonzalez JI; Martinez-Urbistondo D; Toledo E; Bullón V; Ruiz-Canela M; Portillo MP; Macías-González M; Perez-Diaz-del-Campo N; García-Gavilán J; Daimiel L; Martínez JA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Micó V; San-Cristobal R; Martín R; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Fitó M; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; López-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem JL; Bueno-Cavanillas A; Tur JA; Martín Sánchez V; Pintó X; Delgado-Rodríguez M; Matía-Martín P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; García-Arellano A; Pertusa-Martinez S; Chaplin A; Garcia-Rios A; Muñoz Bravo C; Schröder H; Babio N; Sorli JV; Gonzalez JI; Martinez-Urbistondo D; Toledo E; Bullón V; Ruiz-Canela M; Portillo MP; Macías-González M; Perez-Diaz-del-Campo N; García-Gavilán J; Daimiel L; Martínez JA
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Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is one of the most important medical problems around the world. Identification of patient´s singular characteristic could help to reduce the clinical impact and facilitate individualized management. This study aimed to categorize MetS patients using phenotypical and clinical variables habitually collected during health check-ups of individuals considered to have high cardiovascular risk. The selected markers to categorize MetS participants included anthropometric variables as well as clinical data, biochemical parameters and prescribed pharmacological treatment. An exploratory factor analysis was carried out with a subsequent hierarchical cluster analysis using the z-scores from factor analysis. The first step identified three different factors. The first was determined by hypercholesterolemia and associated treatments, the second factor exhibited glycemic disorders and accompanying treatments and the third factor was characterized by hepatic enzymes. Subsequently four clusters of patients were identified, where cluster 1 was characterized by glucose disorders and treatments, cluster 2 presented mild MetS, cluster 3 presented exacerbated levels of hepatic enzymes and cluster 4 highlighted cholesterol and its associated treatments Interestingly, the liver status related cluster was characterized by higher protein consumption and cluster 4 with low polyunsaturated fatty acid intake. This research emphasized the potential clinical relevance of hepatic impairments in addition to MetS traditional characterization for precision and personalized management of MetS patients.
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- 2022
44. Desired weight loss and its association with health, health behaviors and perceptions in an adult population with weight excess: One-year follow-up
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Bouzas C; Bibiloni MdM; Garcia S; Mateos D; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Goday A; Martínez JA; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; Lopez-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Riquelme-Gallego B; Martín-Sánchez V; Pintó X; Gaforio JJ; Matía P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Daimiel L; Ros E; Pascual-Roquet-Jalmar E; Babio N; Gonzalez-Monge I; Castañer O; Abete I; Sorto-Sánchez C; Carlos Benavente-Marín J; Torres-Collado L; Martin M; García-Ríos A; Castro-Barquero S; Fernández-García JC; Santos-Lozano JM; Fernandez-Lazaro CI; Salas-Huetos A; Guillem-Saiz P; Zomeño MD; Ángeles Zulet M; Goikoetxea-Bahon A; Gea A; Nishi SK; Schröder H; Tur JA, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Bouzas C; Bibiloni MdM; Garcia S; Mateos D; Martínez-González MÁ; Salas-Salvadó J; Corella D; Goday A; Martínez JA; Alonso-Gómez ÁM; Wärnberg J; Vioque J; Romaguera D; Lopez-Miranda J; Estruch R; Tinahones FJ; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Riquelme-Gallego B; Martín-Sánchez V; Pintó X; Gaforio JJ; Matía P; Vidal J; Vázquez C; Daimiel L; Ros E; Pascual-Roquet-Jalmar E; Babio N; Gonzalez-Monge I; Castañer O; Abete I; Sorto-Sánchez C; Carlos Benavente-Marín J; Torres-Collado L; Martin M; García-Ríos A; Castro-Barquero S; Fernández-García JC; Santos-Lozano JM; Fernandez-Lazaro CI; Salas-Huetos A; Guillem-Saiz P; Zomeño MD; Ángeles Zulet M; Goikoetxea-Bahon A; Gea A; Nishi SK; Schröder H; Tur JA
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Background: Metabolic syndrome (MetS) worsens quality of life and increases mortality. Dissatisfaction with weight in patients with MetS may modify the effect of lifestyle interventions to achieve changes in health-related behaviors. Objective: To assess 1-year changes in cardiovascular risk scores, self-perceived general health and health-related behaviors according to observed changes in desired weight loss during the first year of intervention in a large cardiovascular prevention trial. Design: Prospective analysis of the PREDIMED-PLUS trial, including 5,499 adults (55–75 years old) with overweight or obesity at baseline. Methods: The desired weight loss was the difference between ideal and measured weight. Tertiles of change in desired weight loss (1 year vs. baseline) were defined by the following cut-off points: ≥0.0 kg (T1, n = 1,638); 0.0 to −4.0 kg (T2, n = 1,903); ≤−4.0 kg (T3, n = 1,958). A food frequency questionnaire assessed diet and the Minnesota-REGICOR questionnaire assessed physical activity. The Framingham equation assessed cardiovascular risks. The changes in the severity of MetS were also assessed. The Beck Depression Inventory assessed depressive symptoms and the SF-36 assessed health-related quality of life. Data were analyzed using general linear models. Results: BMI decreased at T2 and T3 (T1: 0.3, T2: −0.7, T3: −1.9). The most significant improvement in diet quality was observed at T3. Cardiovascular risk decreased at T2 and T3. Mean reductions in MetS severity score were: −0.02 at T1, −0.39 at T2 and −0.78 at T3. The perception of physical health increases in successive tertiles. Conclusions: In older adults with MetS, more ambitious desired weight loss goals were associated with improvements in diet, cardiovascular health and perceived physic
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- 2022
45. Occupational exposures and risk of oesophageal cancer by histological type: a case—control study in eastern Spain
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Santibañez, M, Vioque, J, Alguacil, J, Barber, X, de la Hera, M García, and Kauppinen, T
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- 2008
46. Prenatal mercury exposure in a multicenter cohort study in Spain
- Author
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Ramon, R., Murcia, M., Aguinagalde, X., Amurrio, A., Llop, S., Ibarluzea, J., Lertxundi, A., Alvarez-Pedrerol, M., Casas, M., Vioque, J., Sunyer, J., Tardon, A., Martinez-Arguelles, B., and Ballester, F.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Sociodemographic, reproductive and dietary predictors of organochlorine compounds levels in pregnant women in Spain
- Author
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Ibarluzea, J., Alvarez-Pedrerol, M., Guxens, M., Marina, L. Santa, Basterrechea, M., Lertxundi, A., Etxeandia, A., Goñi, F., Vioque, J., Ballester, F., and Sunyer, J.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A colorimetric method for determination of γ-glutamyl- S-ethenyl-cysteine in narbon vetch ( Vicia narbonensis L.) seeds
- Author
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Sánchez-Vioque, R., Rodríguez-Conde, M.F., Vioque, J., Girón-Calle, J., Santana-Méridas, O., De-los-Mozos-Pascual, M., Izquierdo-Melero, M.E., and Alaiz, M.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Association between the Use of Folic Acid Supplements during Pregnancy and Children's Cognitive Function at 7-9 Years of Age in the INMA Cohort Study
- Author
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Compañ-Gabucio LM, Torres-Collado L, Garcia-de la Hera M, Fernández-Somoano A, Tardón A, Julvez J, Sunyer J, Rebagliato M, Murcia M, Ibarluzea J, Santa-Marina L, and Vioque J
- Subjects
attentional function ,birth cohort study ,folic acid ,sex specific ,high ,deficiency ,working memory - Abstract
This study investigated the association between maternal low (
- Published
- 2022
50. Fat intake pattern in women with polycystic ovary syndrome
- Author
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Navarro-Lafuente F, Arense-Gonzalo JJ, Sánchez-Ferrer ML, Prieto-Sánchez MT, Cutillas-Tolín A, Mendiola J, Adoamnei E, Gazabat-Barbado E, Vioque J, and Torres-Cantero AM
- Subjects
PCOS phenotype ,Dietary intake ,Lipid intake ,Polycystic ovary syndrome ,Diet - Abstract
RESEARCH QUESTION: Do women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have a different fat intake pattern to women without PCOS? DESIGN: Case-control study of 276 women between 20 and 35 years old from the Murcia region of Spain. Cases (n?=?121) attended the Department of Gynaecology and Obstetrics of the University Clinical Hospital and were diagnosed with PCOS using Rotterdam criteria. Controls (n?=?155) were women without PCOS attending the gynaecological outpatient clinic for routine gynaecological examinations. Data from clinical, gynaecological and analytical examinations were collected, including a food frequency questionnaire. Associations between fat intake and presence of PCOS and its phenotypes were examined using multiple logistic regression, adjusting for potential confounding factors. RESULTS: Although no association was found between fatty acid intake and PCOS, significant associations were observed for some PCOS phenotypes. The PCOS phenotype characterized by hyperandrogenism?+?oligo/amenorrhoea?+?polycystic ovarian morphology ('H+O+POM') was significantly associated with a higher intake of polyunsaturated fat (odds ratio [OR] 4.0; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.1-14.2; fourth quartile of highest intake [Q4] versus lowest intake quartile as reference [Q1]) and omega-6 fatty acids (OR 3.5; 95% CI 1.01-12.4; Q3 versus Q1). The 'H+O' phenotype was positively associated with saturated fat intake (OR 6.9; 95% CI 1.1-41.6; Q4 versus Q1). CONCLUSION: This exploratory study suggests that higher intakes of specific fatty acids are related to some PCOS phenotypes although no association was found for PCOS on a global basis. It is recommended that studies with larger sample size be performed to further explore these associations, thus contributing to establishing recommendations about fat intake adapted to different PCOS phenotypes.
- Published
- 2022
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