1. Dietary inflammatory index, risk of incident hypertension, and effect modification from BMI
- Author
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Francesca Mancini, Marie-Christine Boutron-Ruault, Conor-James MacDonald, Nasser Laouali, and Anne-Laure Madika
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,Disease ,Clinical nutrition ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Dietary inflammatory index ,Hypertension risk ,Body Mass Index ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,education ,lcsh:RC620-627 ,Nutrition ,Inflammation ,education.field_of_study ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Research ,Hazard ratio ,3. Good health ,Diet ,lcsh:Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,Hypertension ,Female ,business ,Effect modification ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Cohort study - Abstract
IntroductionPrevious studies have identified a positive association between the inflammatory potential of the diet and hypertension. It is not known if BMI is an effect modifier for this association, nor if the association is dose-respondent. This study aimed to assess the association between the dietary inflammatory index (DII) and the risk of hypertension, and assess any effect modification from BMI.MethodsData from the E3N cohort study, a French prospective population-based study initiated in 1990 was used. From the women in the study, we included those who completed a detailed diet history questionnaire, and who did not have prevalent hypertension or cardiovascular disease at baseline, resulting in 46,652 women. The adapted DII was assessed with data from the dietary questionnaire. Hypertension cases were self-reported and verified through a drug-reimbursement database. Cox proportional hazard models were used to calculate hazard ratios. Spline regression was used to determine any dose-respondent relationship.ResultsDuring 884,267 person-years, 13,183 cases of incident hypertension were identified. The median DII in the population was slightly pro-inflammatory (DII = + 0.44). A highly pro-inflammatory diet (DII > 3.0) was associated with a slight increase in hypertension risk (HRQ1-Q5 = 1.07 [1.02, 1.13]). Evidence was observed for effect modification from BMI, with associations strongest amongst women in the 18.5–21.0 BMI range (HRQ1-Q5 = 1.17 [1.06, 1.29]). A weak dose-respondent relationship was observed.ConclusionEvidence for a weak association between DII and hypertension was observed. Associations were stronger amongst healthy-lean women.
- Published
- 2020