1. Telomere length as biomarker of nutritional therapy for prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus development in patients with coronary heart disease: CORDIOPREV randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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Ojeda-Rodriguez, Ana, Rangel-Zuñiga, Oriol A., Arenas-de Larriva, Antonio P., Gutierrez-Mariscal, Francisco M., Torres-Peña, Jose D., Romero-Cabrera, Juan L., Podadera-Herreros, Alicia, García-Fernandez, Helena, Porras-Pérez, Esther, Luque, Raul M., Kales, Stefanos N., Perez-Martinez, Pablo, Delgado-Lista, Javier, Yubero-Serrano, Elena M., and Lopez-Miranda, Jose
- Subjects
TYPE 2 diabetes ,CARDIAC patients ,CORONARY disease ,DIETARY patterns ,DIET therapy ,MYOCARDIAL infarction - Abstract
Background: Telomere Length (TL), a marker of cellular aging, holds promise as a biomarker to elucidate the molecular mechanism of diabetes. This study aimed to investigate whether shorter telomeres are associated with a higher risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) incidence in patients with coronary heart disease; and to determine whether the most suitable dietary patterns, particularly a Mediterranean diet or a low-fat diet, can mitigate the development of diabetes in these patients after a follow-up period of five years. Methods: The CORonary Diet Intervention with Olive oil and cardiovascular PREVention study (CORDIOPREV study) was a single-centre, randomised clinical trial done at the Reina Sofia University Hospital in Córdoba, Spain. Patients with established coronary heart disease (aged 20–75 years) were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio by the Andalusian School of Public Health to receive two healthy diets. Clinical investigators were masked to treatment assignment; participants were not. Quantitative-PCR was used to assess TL measurements. Findings: 1002 patients (59.5 ± 8.7 years and 82.5% men) were enrolled into Mediterranean diet (n = 502) or a low-fat diet (n = 500) groups. In this analysis, we included all 462 patients who did not have T2DM at baseline. Among them, 107 patients developed T2DM after a median of 60 months. Cox regression analyses showed that patients at risk of short telomeres (TL < percentile 20th) are more likely to experience T2DM than those at no risk of short telomeres (HR 1.65, p-value 0.023). In terms of diet, patients at high risk of short telomeres had a higher risk of T2DM incidence after consuming a low-fat diet compared to patients at no risk of short telomeres (HR 2.43, 95CI% 1.26 to 4.69, p-value 0.008), while no differences were observed in the Mediterranean diet group. Conclusion: Patients with shorter TL presented a higher risk of developing T2DM. This association could be mitigated with a specific dietary pattern, in our case a Mediterranean diet, to prevent T2DM in patients with coronary heart disease. Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov number NCT00924937. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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