162 results on '"Sarah Berry"'
Search Results
2. Metabolomic and gut microbiome profiles across the spectrum of community-based COVID and non-COVID disease
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Marc F. Österdahl, Ronan Whiston, Carole H. Sudre, Francesco Asnicar, Nathan J. Cheetham, Aitor Blanco Miguez, Vicky Bowyer, Michela Antonelli, Olivia Snell, Liane dos Santos Canas, Christina Hu, Jonathan Wolf, Cristina Menni, Michael Malim, Deborah Hart, Tim Spector, Sarah Berry, Nicola Segata, Katie Doores, Sebastien Ourselin, Emma L. Duncan, and Claire J. Steves
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Whilst most individuals with SARS-CoV-2 infection have relatively mild disease, managed in the community, it was noted early in the pandemic that individuals with cardiovascular risk factors were more likely to experience severe acute disease, requiring hospitalisation. As the pandemic has progressed, increasing concern has also developed over long symptom duration in many individuals after SARS-CoV-2 infection, including among the majority who are managed acutely in the community. Risk factors for long symptom duration, including biological variables, are still poorly defined. Here, we examine post-illness metabolomic profiles, using nuclear magnetic resonance (Nightingale Health Oyj), and gut-microbiome profiles, using shotgun metagenomic sequencing (Illumina Inc), in 2561 community-dwelling participants with SARS-CoV-2. Illness duration ranged from asymptomatic (n = 307) to Post-COVID Syndrome (n = 180), and included participants with prolonged non-COVID-19 illnesses (n = 287). We also assess a pre-established metabolomic biomarker score, previously associated with hospitalisation for both acute pneumonia and severe acute COVID-19 illness, for its association with illness duration. We found an atherogenic-dyslipidaemic metabolic profile, including biomarkers such as fatty acids and cholesterol, was associated with longer duration of illness, both in individuals with and without SARS-CoV-2 infection. Greater values of a pre-existing metabolomic biomarker score also associated with longer duration of illness, regardless of SARS-CoV-2 infection. We found no association between illness duration and gut microbiome profiles in convalescence. This highlights the potential role of cardiometabolic dysfunction in relation to the experience of long duration symptoms after symptoms of acute infection, both COVID-19 as well as other illnesses.
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- 2023
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3. The effect of exercise in a fasted state on plasma low‐density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations in males and females
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Louise Bradshaw, Francoise Koumanov, Sarah Berry, James A. Betts, and Javier Gonzalez
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lipid metabolism ,lipids ,physical activity ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death worldwide. Physical activity interventions improve almost all modifiable CVD risk factors, but the effect of physical activity on low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL‐C) is uncertain. This may be due to lack of research on the feeding status in which the physical activity is performed. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of fasted versus fed exercise on LDL‐C concentrations in males and females. One hundred healthy participants, equal males and females, aged between 25 and 60 years will be recruited and will undergo a home‐based 12‐week exercise intervention. After baseline testing, participants will be randomized to a fasted exercise (exercise after an 8‐h fast) or fed exercise (exercise 90–180 min after ingestion of 1 g kg−1 CHO) group and will perform 50 min of moderate intensity exercise (e.g., 95% heart rate of lactate threshold 1) three times a week either before or after a high carbohydrate (1 g kg−1) meal. Participants will visit the laboratory again at week 4 and week 12 and measurements will be taken for body composition, resting blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, lipid profiles and systemic inflammation, lactate threshold, and 14‐day blood glucose control.
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- 2023
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4. Diet and gut microbial associations in irritable bowel syndrome according to disease subtype
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Yiqing Wang, Wenjie Ma, Raaj Mehta, Long H. Nguyen, Mingyang Song, David A. Drew, Francesco Asnicar, Curtis Huttenhower, Nicola Segata, Jonathan Wolf, Tim Spector, Sarah Berry, Kyle Staller, and Andrew T. Chan
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Fiber ,functional bowel disorder ,diarrhea ,microbial enzymes ,glycan metabolism ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
ABSTRACTThe role of diet and the gut microbiome in the etiopathogenesis of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is not fully understood. Therefore, we investigated the interplay between dietary risk factors and gut microbiota in IBS subtypes using a food frequency questionnaire and stool metagenome data from 969 participants aged 18–65 years in the ZOE PREDICT 1 study, an intervention study designed to predict postprandial metabolic responses. We identified individuals with IBS subtype according to the Rome III criteria based on predominant bowel habits during symptom onset: diarrhea (i.e. looser), constipation (i.e. harder), and mixed. Participants with IBS-D (n = 59) consumed more healthy plant-based foods (e.g. whole grains, leafy vegetables) and fiber, while those with IBS-C (n = 49) tended to consume more unhealthy plant-based foods (e.g. refined grains, fruit juice) than participants without IBS (n = 797). Microbial diversity was nominally lower in patients with IBS-D than in participants without IBS or with IBS-C. Using multivariable-adjusted linear regression, we identified specific microbiota variations in IBS subtypes, including slight increases in pro-inflammatory taxa in IBS-C (e.g. Escherichia coli) and loss of strict anaerobes in IBS-D (e.g. Faecalibacterium prausnitzii). Our analysis also revealed intriguing evidence of interactions between diet and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. The positive associations between fiber and iron intake and IBS-diarrhea were stronger among individuals with a higher relative abundance of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, potentially driven by carbohydrate metabolic pathways, including the superpathway of β-D-glucuronide and D-glucuronate degradation. In conclusion, our findings suggest subtype-specific variations in dietary habits, gut microbial composition and function, and diet-microbiota interactions in IBS, providing insights into potential microbiome-informed dietary interventions.
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- 2023
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5. Patterns of risk exposure in first 1,000 days of life and health, behavior, and education-related problems at age 4.5: evidence from Growing Up in New Zealand, a longitudinal cohort study
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Jan L. Wallander, Sarah Berry, Polly Atatoa Carr, Elizabeth R. Peterson, Karen E. Waldie, Emma Marks, Stephanie D’Souza, and Susan M. B. Morton
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Early childhood ,development ,risk exposure ,Health ,Obesity ,Injury ,Behavior problems ,School start ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract Background Children who are high priority candidates for early intervention need to be identified to reduce their risk for experiencing problems in development. Those exposed to multiple risk factors are more likely to exhibit problems in development than those exposed to a single or no risk factor. We examined the longitudinal associations between persistence and timing of exposure to cumulative risk (CR) on three occasions by age 2 and problems in development at age 4.5 in health, behavior, and education-related domains. Methods Data are from Growing Up in New Zealand (NZ), a prospective longitudinal study of a birth cohort first assessed during their last trimester in 2009–10 and followed at ages 9 months and 2 and 4.5 years. All women with an expected delivery date in a 12-month period who resided within a defined region were invited to participate, with no additional eligibility criteria. Exposure was measured for 12 sociodemographic and maternal health risk factors at third trimester and ages 9 months and 2 years, from which developmental trajectories were constructed capturing persistence and timing of CR exposure. Ten developmental outcomes were measured at age 4.5 to classify problems in overall health status, obesity, and injuries; internalizing and externalizing behavior problems; and letter naming, counting forward and backward, and expectations for starting school and completing education. Results Analyses of data from 6156 children (49% female, 33% Non-European ethnicity) who participated in the 4.5-age assessment uniformly showed associations between exposure to more than consistently zero CR across early development and higher prevalence of being classified with problems for 9 of 10 outcomes. Persistent exposure to a CR ≥ 4 was generally associated with a higher prevalence of problems for 7 of 10 outcomes, whereas the timing of first exposure to CR ≥ 4 showed a less consistent association with problem outcomes. Conclusions These findings are concerning because over 50% of NZ children are exposed to at least one of these risk factors at some point in early development. Routine screening of most of these risk factors during pregnancy is feasible and can identify priority candidates for intervention.
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- 2021
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6. Influence of information provided prior to switching from Humira to biosimilar adalimumab on UK patients’ satisfaction: a cross-sectional survey by patient organisations
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Peter C Taylor, Daniel Prieto-Alhambra, Sarah Berry, Ailsa Bosworth, Clare Jacklin, Kayoko Kaneko, Sally Dickinson, and Helen McAteer
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Medicine - Published
- 2022
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7. Telomere length in early childhood is associated with sex and ethnicity
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Kien Ly, Caroline Walker, Sarah Berry, Russell Snell, Emma Marks, Zaneta Thayer, Polly Atatoa-Carr, and Susan Morton
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Telomeres are repetitive DNA sequences at the end of chromosomes that function to protect chromosomes from degradation. Throughout the life course, telomere length decreases with age and is influenced by environmental factors and health conditions. This study aimed to determine the relative telomere lengths in a diverse cohort of about 4000 four-year-old children in New Zealand. Linear regression was used to investigate the relationship between telomere length, child gender, ethnicity, paternal age and deprivation. We observed substantial variation in telomere length according to sex and self-identified ethnicity. Telomere length was longer in females compared to males (coefficient of 0.042, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.024–0.060). European children had shorter telomere than both the indigenous Māori (coefficient of 0.03, CI 0.007–0.055) and Pacific children (coefficient of 0.15, CI 0.12–0.18). The data suggest that telomere lengths are highly variable and variability between individuals arise from early age, influenced partly by sex and ethnicity. Longer telomeres in indigenous Māori and Pacific children may reflect the heritability of telomere length in genetically less complex populations. This study increases our understanding of telomere dynamics in young children since the majority of telomere studies are conducted in adults.
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- 2019
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8. Housing tenure as a focus for reducing inequalities in the home safety environment: evidence from Growing Up in New Zealand
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Sarah Berry, Polly Atatoa Carr, Bridget Kool, Jatender Mohal, Susan Morton, and Cameron Grant
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household safety ,cohort study ,Growing Up in New Zealand ,housing tenure ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives: To determine whether specific demographic characteristics are associated with the presence or absence of household safety strategies. Methods: This study was conducted within Growing Up in New Zealand, a contemporary longitudinal study of New Zealand (NZ) children. Multivariable analyses were used to examine the maternal (self‐prioritised ethnicity, education, age, self‐reported health) and household (area‐level deprivation, tenure, crowding, residential mobility, dwelling type) determinants of household safety strategies being present in the homes of young children. Results: In comparison to family‐owned homes, privately owned rental homes were less likely (OR=0.78; 95%CI 0.65–0.92), and government‐owned rental homes were more likely (OR=1.74, 95%CI 1.25–2.41) to have eight or more household safety strategies present. Conclusions: Living in a privately owned rental home in NZ exposes children to an environment where there are fewer household safety strategies in place. Implications for public health: Housing tenure provides a clear target focus for improving the household safety environment for NZ children.
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- 2017
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9. A triad of highly divergent polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (PIGR) haplotypes with major effect on IgA concentration in bovine milk.
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Sarah Berry, Wouter Coppieters, Stephen Davis, Alayna Burrett, Natalie Thomas, David Palmer, Van Kelly, Vladimir Obolonkin, Kathryn Sanders, Richard Spelman, Michel Georges, Klaus Lehnert, and Russell Snell
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine a genetic basis for IgA concentration in milk of Bos taurus. We used a Holstein-Friesian x Jersey F2 crossbred pedigree to undertake a genome-wide search for QTL influencing IgA concentration and yield in colostrum and milk. We identified a single genome-wide significant QTL on chromosome 16, maximising at 4.8 Mbp. The polymeric immunoglobulin receptor gene (PIGR) was within the confidence interval of the QTL. In addition, mRNA expression analysis revealed a liver PIGR expression QTL mapping to the same locus as the IgA quantitative trait locus. Sequencing and subsequent genotyping of the PIGR gene revealed three divergent haplotypes that explained the variance of both the IgA QTL and the PIGR expression QTL. Genetic selection based on these markers will facilitate the production of bovine herds producing milk with higher concentrations of IgA.
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- 2013
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10. Arts and Cultural Management During the Pandemic
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Sarah, Berry, primary, Dutch, Reutter, additional, Millesen, Judith L., additional, and Trochmann, Maren B., additional
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- 2023
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11. How do we differentiate not demonise – Is there a role for healthier processed foods in an age of food insecurity? Proceedings of a roundtable event
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Stacey Lockyer, Ayela Spiro, Sarah Berry, Jibin He, Shefalee Loth, Andrea Martinez‐Inchausti, Duane Mellor, Monique Raats, Milka Sokolović, Santosh Vijaykumar, and Sara Stanner
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2023
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12. (Re)Embodying the Disembodied Voice of Lyric: The Radio Poems of Derek Walcott and Sylvia Plath
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Sarah Berry
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Literature and Literary Theory - Abstract
Derek Walcott’s Harry Dernier and Sylvia Plath’s Three Women, two little-known, midcentury radio plays, cultivate characters who sound like the speaker of a lyric poem, even as they foreground the invisible bodies behind the voices. In offering us voices that both invite and obstruct lyric reading, Plath and Walcott make manifest a tension present in all lyric poetry—between the embodied individual, on the one hand, and the lyric speaker, on the other. Harry Dernier parodies prominent instances of poetic address, dramatizing the inadequacy of the Western literary tradition in the face of a real catastrophe. Three Women invites the audience to interpret its speakers lyrically, but then undermines the possibility of such interpretation by pointing to the ways that these voices belong to specific, gendered bodies. In this way, Plath highlights the ambiguity in how the term “voice” is used in relation to lyric and, in this, shapes a critique of lyric voicing.
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- 2022
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13. Top doctors who say we can beat cancer in young people by giving them Ozempic.
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Professor Tim Spector; Professor Sarah Berry
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T [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2024
14. Modernism's Metronome: Meter and Twentieth-Century Poetics by Ben Glaser
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Sarah Berry
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Automotive Engineering - Published
- 2022
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15. Impact of insufficient sleep on dysregulated blood glucose control under standardised meal conditions
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Matthew P. Walker, Andrew T. Chan, Raphael Vallat, Jonathan Wolf, Juan Fernandez-Tajes, Linda M. Delahanty, Ana M. Valdes, David A. Drew, Tim D. Spector, Paul W. Franks, Nicola Segata, Neli Tsereteli, Sarah Berry, and Jose M. Ordovas
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Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Metabolic health ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Glycemic Control ,Bedtime ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Person-centring ,Aged ,Breakfast ,030304 developmental biology ,Morning ,2. Zero hunger ,0303 health sciences ,Meal ,Diet ,Postprandial glucose ,Sleep ,Female ,Glycemic Index ,Middle Aged ,Postprandial Period ,Sleep Deprivation ,business.industry ,Repeated measures design ,Actigraphy ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Postprandial ,business - Abstract
Aims/hypothesis Sleep, diet and exercise are fundamental to metabolic homeostasis. In this secondary analysis of a repeated measures, nutritional intervention study, we tested whether an individual’s sleep quality, duration and timing impact glycaemic response to a breakfast meal the following morning. Methods Healthy adults’ data (N = 953 [41% twins]) were analysed from the PREDICT dietary intervention trial. Participants consumed isoenergetic standardised meals over 2 weeks in the clinic and at home. Actigraphy was used to assess sleep variables (duration, efficiency, timing) and continuous glucose monitors were used to measure glycaemic variation (>8000 meals). Results Sleep variables were significantly associated with postprandial glycaemic control (2 h incremental AUC), at both between- and within-person levels. Sleep period time interacted with meal type, with a smaller effect of poor sleep on postprandial blood glucose levels when high-carbohydrate (low fat/protein) (pinteraction = 0.02) and high-fat (pinteraction = 0.03) breakfasts were consumed compared with a reference 75 g OGTT. Within-person sleep period time had a similar interaction (high carbohydrate: pinteraction = 0.001, high fat: pinteraction = 0.02). Within- and between-person sleep efficiency were significantly associated with lower postprandial blood glucose levels irrespective of meal type (both p p = 0.035 and p = 0.051, respectively). Conclusions/interpretation Poor sleep efficiency and later bedtime routines are associated with more pronounced postprandial glycaemic responses to breakfast the following morning. A person’s deviation from their usual sleep pattern was also associated with poorer postprandial glycaemic control. These findings underscore sleep as a modifiable, non-pharmacological therapeutic target for the optimal regulation of human metabolic health. Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03479866. Graphical abstract
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- 2021
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16. PCSK9 Activity Is Potentiated Through HDL Binding
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Sean A. Burnap, Gerd Heusch, Stefan Kiechl, Ruifang Lu, Elisa Duregotti, Katherine Sattler, Sarah Berry, Konstantinos Theofilatos, Marlene Notdurfter, Sotirios Tsimikas, Bodo Levkau, Raimund Pechlaner, Bernhard Paulweber, Gregorio Rungger, Carlos Fernández-Hernando, Manuel Mayr, Kaloyan Takov, Johann Willeit, and Wendy L. Hall
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Male ,Proteome ,Physiology ,Medizin ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular ,Coronary artery disease ,Original Research ,mass spectrometry ,Chemistry ,Hep G2 Cells ,Middle Aged ,Postprandial Period ,Heart Disease ,HDL binding ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,Kexin ,Female ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Lipoproteins, HDL ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Protein Binding ,medicine.medical_specialty ,HDL ,Lipoproteins ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Apolipoprotein C-III ,PCSK9 ,Subtilisin ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Proprotein convertase ,cardiovascular diseases ,lipoproteins ,Endocrinology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,apolipoproteins ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text., Rationale: PCSK9 (proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9) circulates in a free and lipoprotein-bound form, yet the functional consequence of the association between PCSK9 and HDL (high-density lipoprotein) remains unexplored. Objective: This study sought to interrogate the novel relationship between PCSK9 and HDL in humans. Methods and Results: Comparing lipoprotein and apolipoprotein profiles by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and targeted mass spectrometry measurements with PCSK9 levels in the community-based Bruneck study (n=656) revealed a positive association of plasma PCSK9 with small HDL, alongside a highly significant positive correlation between plasma levels of PCSK9 and apolipoprotein C3 (apoC3), an inhibitor of lipoprotein lipase. The latter association was replicated in an independent cohort, the SAPHIR study (Salzburg Atherosclerosis Prevention Program in Subjects at High Individual Risk; n=270). Thus, PCSK9-HDL association was determined during the postprandial response in two dietary studies (n=20 participants each, 8 time points). Peak triglyceride levels coincided with an attenuation of the PCSK9-HDL association, a loss of apoC3 from HDL, and lower levels of small HDL as measured by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Crosslinking mass spectrometry upon isolated HDL identified PCSK9 as a potential HDL-binding partner. PCSK9 association with HDL was confirmed through size-exclusion chromatography and immuno-isolation. Quantitative proteomics upon HDL isolated from patients with coronary artery disease (n=172) returned PCSK9 as a core member of the HDL proteome. Combined interrogation of the HDL proteome and lipidome revealed a distinct cluster of PCSK9, phospholipid transfer protein, clusterin, and apolipoprotein E within the HDL proteome that was altered by sex and positively correlated with sphingomyelin content. Mechanistically, HDL facilitated PCSK9-mediated low-density lipoprotein receptor degradation and reduced low-density lipoprotein uptake through the modulation of PCSK9 internalization and multimerization. Conclusions: This study reports HDL as a binder of PCSK9 and regulator of its function. The combination of -omic technologies revealed postprandial lipemia as a driver of PCSK9 and apoC3 release from HDL. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03191513; URL: https://www.isrctn.com; Unique identifier: ISRCTN20774126.
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- 2021
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17. Mineral nutrition in penaeid shrimp
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Ha H. Truong, Barney M. Hines, Maurício G. Emerenciano, David Blyth, Sarah Berry, Tansyn H. Noble, Nicholas A. Bourne, Nicholas Wade, Artur N. Rombenso, and Cedric J. Simon
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Ecology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science - Published
- 2022
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18. Test collection management and labeling system.
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Eunyee Koh, Andruid Kerne, and Sarah Berry
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- 2009
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19. Metabolomic and gut microbiome profiles across the spectrum of community-based COVID and non-COVID disease: A COVID-19 Biobank study
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Marc F. Österdahl, Ronan Whiston, Carole H. Sudre, Francesco Asnicar, Nathan J. Cheetham, Aitor Blanco Miguez, Vicky Bowyer, Michela Antonelli, Olivia Snell, Liane dos Santos Canas, Christina Hu, Jonathan Wolf, Cristina Menni, Michael Malim, Deborah Hart, Tim Spector, Sarah Berry, Nicola Segata, Katie Doores, Sebastien Ourselin, Emma L Duncan, and Claire J Steves
- Abstract
Whilst many with SARS-CoV-2 infection have mild disease, managed in the community, individuals with cardiovascular risk factors experienced often more severe acute disease, requiring hospitalisation. Increasing concern has also developed over long symptom duration in many individuals, including the majority who managed acutely in the community. Risk factors for long symptom duration, including biological variables, are still poorly defined.We examine post-illness metabolomic and gut-microbiome profiles, in community-dwelling participants with SARS-CoV-2, ranging from asymptomatic illness to Post-COVID Syndrome, and participants with prolonged non-COVID-19 illnesses. We also assess a pre-established metabolomic biomarker score for its association with illness duration.We found an atherogenic-dyslipidaemic metabolic profile, and greater biomarker scores, associated with longer illness, both in individuals with and without SARS-CoV-2 infection. We found no association between illness duration and gut microbiome in convalescence.Findings highlight the potential role of cardiometabolic dysfunction to the experience of long illness duration, including after COVID-19.
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- 2022
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20. Postprandial glycaemic dips predict appetite and energy intake in healthy individuals
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Ana M. Valdes, Tim D. Spector, Paul W. Franks, George Hadjigeorgiou, Graham Finlayson, Long H. Nguyen, Patrick Wyatt, Ruairi O'Driscoll, Sarah Berry, John E. Blundell, David A. Drew, Inbar Linenberg, Andrew T. Chan, Jonathan Wolf, and Haya Al Khatib
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Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hunger ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Appetite ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Satiation ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Quantitative assessment ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,2. Zero hunger ,Meal ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Cell Biology ,Postprandial Period ,Diet ,Endocrinology ,Postprandial ,Healthy individuals ,Female ,Glucose monitors ,Energy Intake ,business ,Validation cohort ,Cohort study - Abstract
Understanding how to modulate appetite in humans is key to developing successful weight loss interventions. Here, we showed that postprandial glucose dips 2–3 h after a meal are a better predictor of postprandial self-reported hunger and subsequent energy intake than peak glucose at 0–2 h and glucose incremental area under the blood glucose curve at 0–2 h. We explore the links among postprandial glucose, appetite and subsequent energy intake in 1,070 participants from a UK exploratory and US validation cohort, who consumed 8,624 standardized meals followed by 71,715 ad libitum meals, using continuous glucose monitors to record postprandial glycaemia. For participants eating each of the standardized meals, the average postprandial glucose dip at 2–3 h relative to baseline level predicted an increase in hunger at 2–3 h (r = 0.16, P
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- 2021
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21. Microbiome connections with host metabolism and habitual diet from 1,098 deeply phenotyped individuals
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Gianmarco Piccinno, Chloe Mirzayi, Caroline I. Le Roy, Nicola Segata, Christopher Bonnett, Rachel J. Gibson, Adrian Tett, Francesco Asnicar, Sehyun Oh, Andrew T. Chan, Serge Danzanvilliers, Curtis Huttenhower, Lucy Francis, George Hadjigeorgiou, Francesca Giordano, Mohsen Mazidi, Ana M. Valdes, Joan Capdevila, Jonathan Wolf, Richard Davies, Leonard Dubois, Jose M. Ordovas, Olatz Mompeo, Ludwig Geistlinger, Asya Khleborodova, Christopher D. Gardner, Levi Waldron, Rachel Hine, Sarah Berry, Davide Bazzani, Haya Al Khatib, David A. Drew, Francesco Beghini, Long H. Nguyen, Mireia Valles-Colomer, Andrew Maltez Thomas, Tim D. Spector, Paul W. Franks, and Emily R Leeming
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Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Prevotella ,Physiology ,Disease ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Food group ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,Microbiome ,Child ,Glycemic ,2. Zero hunger ,Microbiota ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Fasting ,Feeding Behavior ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Postprandial Period ,medicine.disease ,Diet ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,3. Good health ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,Postprandial ,Metagenomics ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Blastocystis ,Food Microbiology ,Metagenome ,Female ,Biomarkers - Abstract
The gut microbiome is shaped by diet and influences host metabolism; however, these links are complex and can be unique to each individual. We performed deep metagenomic sequencing of 1,203 gut microbiomes from 1,098 individuals enrolled in the Personalised Responses to Dietary Composition Trial (PREDICT 1) study, whose detailed long-term diet information, as well as hundreds of fasting and same-meal postprandial cardiometabolic blood marker measurements were available. We found many significant associations between microbes and specific nutrients, foods, food groups and general dietary indices, which were driven especially by the presence and diversity of healthy and plant-based foods. Microbial biomarkers of obesity were reproducible across external publicly available cohorts and in agreement with circulating blood metabolites that are indicators of cardiovascular disease risk. While some microbes, such as Prevotella copri and Blastocystis spp., were indicators of favorable postprandial glucose metabolism, overall microbiome composition was predictive for a large panel of cardiometabolic blood markers including fasting and postprandial glycemic, lipemic and inflammatory indices. The panel of intestinal species associated with healthy dietary habits overlapped with those associated with favorable cardiometabolic and postprandial markers, indicating that our large-scale resource can potentially stratify the gut microbiome into generalizable health levels in individuals without clinically manifest disease.
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- 2021
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22. The challenge of treating chronic pain in inflammatory bowel disease
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Sarah Berry, Qasim Aziz, Jackie Glatter, and Nikul Bakshi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Leadership and Management ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Chronic pain ,Inflammation ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Many patients with inflammatory bowel disease experience chronic pain, even after their inflammation is controlled. This article discusses the barriers and actions required for effective pain management.
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- 2021
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23. Differential associations between a priori diet quality scores and markers of cardiovascular health in women: cross-sectional analyses from TwinsUK
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Sarah Berry, Olatz Mompeo, Massimo Mangino, Rachel J. Gibson, Cristina Menni, and Tim D. Spector
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0301 basic medicine ,2. Zero hunger ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,DASH diet ,business.industry ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Food group ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Red Meat Consumption ,Environmental health ,Dash ,Etiology ,Medicine ,Dementia ,business ,Cause of death - Abstract
CVD is the leading cause of death worldwide and, after dementia, is the second biggest cause of death for women. In England, it accounts for one in four of all deaths. Lifestyle modifications represent the primary route both to reduce CVD risk factors and prevent CVD outcomes. Diet constitutes one of the key modifiable risk factors in the aetiology of CVD. We investigated the relationship between nine main dietary indices and a comprehensive range of CVD risk factors in 2590 women from TwinsUK. After adjustment for multiple testing, we found that the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet was inversely correlated with some of the most common CVD risk factors (BMI, visceral fat (VF), TAG, insulin, homoeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA2-IR) and atherosclerotic CVD (ASCVD) risk) with PFDR ranging from 6·28 × 10−7 to 5·63 × 10−4. Similar association patterns were detected across most of the dietary indices analysed. In our post hoc investigation, to determine if any specific food groups were driving associations between the DASH score and markers of cardiometabolic risk, we found that increased BMI, VF, HOMA2-IR, ASCVD risk, insulin and TAG levels were directly correlated with red meat consumption (PFDR ranging from 4·65 × 10−9 to 7·98 × 10−3) and inversely correlated with whole-grain cereal consumption (PFDR ranging from 1·26 × 10−6 to 8·28 × 10−3). Our findings revealed that the DASH diet is associated with a more favourable CVD risk profile, suggesting that this diet may be a candidate dietary pattern to supplement current UK dietary recommendations for CVD prevention.
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- 2020
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24. Snacking on whole almonds for 6 weeks improves endothelial function and lowers LDL cholesterol but does not affect liver fat and other cardiometabolic risk factors in healthy adults: the ATTIS study, a randomized controlled trial
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Molly O'Callaghan-Latham, Geoffrey Charles-Edwards, Leanne Smith, Nicolas Basty, Eslem Kusaslan, Wendy L. Hall, Peter R. Ellis, Maria D'Annibale, Haris Shuaib, Lucy Francis, Dimitra Christodoulou, Brandon Whitcher, Vita Dikariyanto, Sarah Berry, May Robertson, Camille Palanche, and Philip Chowienczyk
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Fats ,AcademicSubjects/MED00160 ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,endothelial function ,Risk Factors ,cardiovascular disease ,Nuts ,cardiometabolic disease ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,food and beverages ,Middle Aged ,Vasodilation ,Original Research Communications ,Liver ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diet therapy ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,AcademicSubjects/MED00060 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,dietary intervention ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Intramyocellular lipids ,Triglycerides ,Aged ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Adiponectin ,Cholesterol ,business.industry ,Insulin ,almonds ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Cardiovascular Disease Risk ,liver fat ,medicine.disease ,Prunus dulcis ,Editor's Choice ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Resistin ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Liver function ,Snacks ,business - Abstract
Background There is convincing evidence that daily whole almond consumption lowers blood LDL cholesterol concentrations, but effects on other cardiometabolic risk factors such as endothelial function and liver fat are still to be determined. Objectives We aimed to investigate whether isoenergetic substitution of whole almonds for control snacks with the macronutrient profile of average snack intakes, had any impact on markers of cardiometabolic health in adults aged 30–70 y at above-average risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Methods The study was a 6-wk randomized controlled, parallel-arm trial. Following a 2-wk run-in period consuming control snacks (mini-muffins), participants consumed either whole roasted almonds (n = 51) or control snacks (n = 56), providing 20% of daily estimated energy requirements. Endothelial function (flow-mediated dilation), liver fat (MRI/magnetic resonance spectroscopy), and secondary outcomes as markers of cardiometabolic disease risk were assessed at baseline and end point. Results Almonds, compared with control, increased endothelium-dependent vasodilation (mean difference 4.1%-units of measurement; 95% CI: 2.2, 5.9), but there were no differences in liver fat between groups. Plasma LDL cholesterol concentrations decreased in the almond group relative to control (mean difference −0.25 mmol/L; 95% CI: −0.45, −0.04), but there were no group differences in triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, glucose, insulin, insulin resistance, leptin, adiponectin, resistin, liver function enzymes, fetuin-A, body composition, pancreatic fat, intramyocellular lipids, fecal SCFAs, blood pressure, or 24-h heart rate variability. However, the long-phase heart rate variability parameter, very-low-frequency power, was increased during nighttime following the almond treatment compared with control (mean difference 337 ms2; 95% CI: 12, 661), indicating greater parasympathetic regulation. Conclusions Whole almonds consumed as snacks markedly improve endothelial function, in addition to lowering LDL cholesterol, in adults with above-average risk of CVD. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02907684.
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- 2020
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25. Whole almond consumption is associated with better diet quality and cardiovascular disease risk factors in the UK adult population: National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) 2008–2017
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Lucy Francis, Sarah Berry, Wendy L. Hall, Vita Dikariyanto, and Leanne Smith
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Almonds ,Mediterranean diet ,Cross-sectional study ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nutrient ,Risk Factors ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Medicine ,education ,Consumption (economics) ,education.field_of_study ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Vitamin C ,business.industry ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,Vitamin E ,Original Contribution ,Nutrients ,Cardiovascular disease ,Nutrition Surveys ,Prunus dulcis ,United Kingdom ,Diet ,Diet quality ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cross-sectional analysis ,Female ,Energy Intake ,business - Abstract
Purpose This work aimed to estimate whole almond consumption in a nationally representative UK survey population and examine associations with diet quality and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Methods Four-day food record data from the National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) 2008–2017 (n = 6802, age ≥ 19 year) were analyzed to investigate associations between whole almond consumption and diet quality, measured by the modified Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS) and modified Healthy Diet Score (HDS), and CVD risk markers, using survey-adjusted multivariable linear regression. Results Whole almond consumption was reported in 7.6% of the population. Median intake in whole almond consumers was 5.0 g/day (IQR 9.3). Consumers had higher diet quality scores relative to non-consumers; higher intakes of protein, total fat, monounsaturated, n-3 and n-6 polyunsaturated fats, fiber, folate, vitamin C, vitamin E, potassium, magnesium, phosphorus, and iron; and lower intakes of trans-fatty acids, total carbohydrate, sugar, and sodium. BMI and WC were lower in whole almond consumers compared to non-consumers: 25.5 kg/m2 (95% CI 24.9, 26.2) vs 26.3 kg/m2 (25.9, 26.7), and 88.0 cm (86.2, 89.8) vs 90.1 cm (89.1, 91.2), respectively. However, there were no dose-related fully adjusted significant associations between increasing almond intake (g per 1000 kcal energy intake) and lower CVD risk markers. Conclusions Almond intake is low in the UK population, but consumption was associated with better dietary quality and lower CVD risk factors. Habitual consumption of whole almonds should be encouraged as part of a healthy diet.
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- 2020
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26. Chronic pain is common in mitochondrial disease
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Sarah Berry, Michael G. Hanna, Zoe McIntyre, Jelle van den Ameele, Michael C. Lee, Robert D S Pitceathly, Joshua Fuge, and Patrick F. Chinnery
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Mitochondrial DNA ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mitochondrial Diseases ,Adolescent ,Mitochondrial disease ,Pain ,Mitochondrion ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Genetics (clinical) ,Aged ,Mitochondrial disorders ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Neuropathy ,Mitochondria ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neuropathic pain ,Quality of Life ,Neuralgia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chronic Pain ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Highlights • Chronic pain is common in patients with mitochondrial disease. • Pain due to mitochondrial disease is primarily of neuropathic nature. • Distribution, intensity and type of pain are genetically determined., In the absence of cure, the main objectives in the management of patients with mitochondrial disease are symptom control and prevention of complications. While pain is a complicating symptom in many chronic diseases and is known to have a clear impact on quality of life, its prevalence and severity in people with mitochondrial disease is unknown. We conducted a survey of pain symptoms in patients with genetically confirmed mitochondrial disease from two UK mitochondrial disease specialist centres. The majority (66.7%) of patients had chronic pain which was primarily of neuropathic nature. Presence of pain did not significantly impact overall quality of life. The m.3243A>G MTTL1 mutation was associated with higher pain severity and increased the likelihood of neuropathic pain compared to other causative nuclear and mitochondrial gene mutations. Although previously not considered a core symptom in people with mitochondrial disease, pain is a common clinical manifestation, frequently of neuropathic nature, and influenced by genotype. Therefore, pain-related symptoms should be carefully characterised and actively managed in this patient population.
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- 2020
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27. Coming into being…
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Sarah Berry‐Tschinkel
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Clinical Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine in the Arts ,Humans ,Art ,Psychoanalysis ,Drama ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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28. Tree nut snack consumption is associated with better diet quality and CVD risk in the UK adult population: National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) 2008–2014
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Sarah Berry, Leanne Smith, Vita Dikariyanto, Gerda K. Pot, Lucy Francis, and Wendy L. Hall
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Adult ,Male ,Vitamin ,Mediterranean diet ,Cross-sectional study ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nutrient ,medicine ,Humans ,Nuts ,Food science ,education ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,education.field_of_study ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Vitamin C ,business.industry ,Vitamin E ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Nutrients ,Nutrition Surveys ,CVD ,United Kingdom ,Diet ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,chemistry ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,Cross-sectional analysis ,Snacks ,Energy Intake ,business ,Diet quality ,Research Paper ,Polyunsaturated fatty acid - Abstract
Objectives:To examine associations of tree nut snack (TNS) consumption with diet quality and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk in UK adults from National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) 2008–2014.Design:Cross-sectional analysis using data from 4-d food diaries, blood samples and physical measurements for CVD risk markers. To estimate diet quality, modified Mediterranean Diet Score (MDS) and modified Healthy Diet Score (HDS) were applied. Associations of TNS consumption with diet quality and markers of CVD risk were investigated using survey-adjusted multivariable linear regression adjusted for sex, age, ethnicity, socio-economic and smoking status, region of residency and total energy and alcohol intake.Setting:UK free-living population.Subjects:4738 adults (≥19 years).Results:TNS consumers had higher modified MDS and HDS relative to non-consumers. TNS consumers also had lower BMI, WC, SBP and DBP and higher HDL compared to non-consumers, although a dose-related fully adjusted significant association between increasing nut intake (g per 4184 kJ/1000 kcal energy intake) and lower marker of CVD risk was only observed for SBP. TNS consumption was also associated with higher intake of total fat, mono-, n-3 and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids, fibre, vitamin A, thiamin, folate, vitamin C, vitamin E, potassium, magnesium, phosphorus, selenium and iron; and lower intake of saturated fatty acids, trans fatty acids, total carbohydrate, starch, free sugar, sodium and chloride.Conclusions:TNS consumers report better dietary quality and consumption was associated with lower CVD risk factors. Encouraging replacement of less healthy snacks with TNS should be encouraged as part of general dietary guidelines.
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- 2020
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29. Thermal Inactivation Model for Hepatitis E Virus (HEV)
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Linda Scobie, Liam O'Connor, Martin D’Agostino, Nigel Cook, Jonathan Wells, Sarah Berry, Louise Kelly, Anne Wood, and Sue Keenan
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technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages - Abstract
Hepatitis E is an emerging issue, with the number of confirmed cases in the UK increasing in 2009-2015, and decreasing slightly in 2016 and 2017. There is some epidemiological evidence of an association of this virus with undercooked pork and pork products. Currently, there is no standardized method for evaluating thermal stability of HEV and also a lack of a suitable assay that can distinguish between intact HEV that can cause an infection and damaged virus which is not capable of causing an infection. This has raised concerns as it is extremely difficult to extrapolate the risk from pork products in relation to cooking practices. We are seeking to address this knowledge gap, which will not only inform our risk assessment, but will also provide an indication if cooking is sufficient to inactivate the virus in foods
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- 2022
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30. RACIAL DIFFERENCES IN LOCATION AND ACTIVITY-SPECIFIC FALLS IN MASSACHUSETTS, US
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Wenjun Li, Linda Churchill, Annabella Aguirre, Anthony Clarke, Elizabeth Procter-Gray, Kevin Kane, Sarah Berry, and Marian Hannan
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Health (social science) ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Prevention of falls is important to independent living and good health in older age. Circumstances of falls may vary by older person’s sociodemographic attributes, health conditions and living environment. Health Aging and Neighborhood Study (HANS) examined rates of location and activity-specific falls among 388 community-living older adults living in Central Massachusetts between 2018 and 2020. Data on falls were collected using monthly calendar, and information on falls was collected by trained staff via telephone interviews with the participants. The follow-up time ranging from 11.9 to 24.4 months. In total, 431 falls were reported, of which 97% had information on location of fall, and 95% had information on activity at time of fall. Annualized rate of any fall differed significantly by race/ethnicity. Asians had the lowest rate (0.26/year). Rate of Hispanics was approximately twice higher (0.55, p=0.04) and non-Hispanic Whites three times higher (0.84, p
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- 2022
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31. 174 Teenundated- improving unscheduled care of 14–16 year old young persons on a general paediatric unit
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Jonathan Henderson, Jack Gamble, Shilpa Shah, Phil Ross, Claire Ridvan Parris, Sarah Berry, and Joe McConville
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business.industry ,Medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease ,Unit (housing) - Published
- 2021
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32. Significant reduction in humoral immunity among healthcare workers and nursing home residents 6 months after COVID-19 BNT162b2 mRNA vaccination
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Oladayo A. Oyebanji, Htin Aung, Christopher L. King, Mike C. Payne, Kerri St. Denis, Lenore Caris, Sarah Berry, Mark J. Cameron, Christopher F. Rowley, David H. Canaday, Dennis Wilk, Alejandro B. Balazs, Evan C. Lam, Stefan Gravenstein, Brigid Wilson, Debbie Keresztesy, and Cheryl M. Cameron
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Emergency Use Authorization ,biology ,business.industry ,Outbreak ,Neutralization ,Vaccination ,Immunity ,Internal medicine ,Humoral immunity ,Ambulatory ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
High COVID-19 mortality among nursing home (NH) residents led to their prioritization for SARS-CoV-2 vaccination; most NH residents received BNT162b2 mRNA vaccination under the Emergency Use Authorization due to first to market and its availability. With NH residents’ poor initial vaccine response, the rise of NH breakthrough infections and outbreaks, characterization of the durability of immunity to inform public health policy on the need for boosting is needed. We report on humoral immunity from 2 weeks to 6-months post-vaccination in 120 NH residents and 92 ambulatory healthcare worker controls with and without pre-vaccination SARS-CoV-2 infection. Anti-spike and anti-receptor binding domain (RBD) IgG, and serum neutralization titers, were assessed using a bead-based ELISA method and pseudovirus neutralization assay. Anti-spike, anti-RBD and neutralization levels dropped more than 84% over 6 months’ time in all groups irrespective of prior SARS-CoV-2 infection. At 6 months post-vaccine, 70% of the infection-naive NH residents had neutralization titers at or below the lower limit of detection compared to 16% at 2 weeks after full vaccination. These data demonstrate a significant reduction in levels of antibody in all groups. In particular, those infection-naive NH residents had lower initial post-vaccination humoral immunity immediately and exhibited the greatest declines 6 months later. Healthcare workers, given their younger age and relative good-health, achieved higher initial antibody levels and better maintained them, yet also experienced significant declines in humoral immunity. Based on the rapid spread of the delta variant and reports of vaccine breakthrough in NH and among younger community populations, boosting NH residents may be warranted.
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- 2021
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33. Improving shared decision-making for osteoporosis pharmacologic therapy in nursing homes: a qualitative analysis
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Cathleen S. Colón-Emeric, Emily J. Hecker, Eleanor McConnell, Laurie Herndon, Milta Little, Tingzhong Xue, and Sarah Berry
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Humans ,Osteoporosis ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Dementia ,Article ,Aged ,Nursing Homes - Abstract
Decisions on whether to use pharmacologic osteoporosis therapy in skilled nursing facility residents are complex and require shared decision-making. Residents, proxies, and staff desire individualized fracture risk estimates that consider advanced age, dementia, and mobility. They want options for reducing administration burden, monitoring instructions, and periodic reassessment of risk vs. benefit.Decisions about pharmacologic osteoporosis treatment in nursing home (NH) residents with advanced age and multimorbidity are complex and should occur using shared decision-making. Our objective was to identify processes and tools to improve shared decision-making about pharmacologic osteoporosis treatment in NHs.Qualitative analysis of data collected in three NHs from residents at high fracture risk, their proxies, nursing assistants, nurses, and one nurse practitioner (n = 28). Interviews explored participants' stories, attitudes, and experiences with oral osteoporosis medication management. Framework analysis was used to identify barriers to shared decision-making regarding osteoporosis treatment in this setting.Participants wanted individualized fracture risk estimates that consider immobility, advanced age, and comorbid dementia. Residents and proxies expected nursing staff to be involved in the decision-making; nursing staff wished to be informed on the relative risks vs. benefits of medications and given monitoring instructions. Two important competing demands to address during the shared decision-making process were burdensome administration requirements and polypharmacy. Participants wanted to reassess pharmacologic treatment appropriateness over time as clinical status or goals of care change.Shared decision-making using strategies and tools identified in this analysis may move osteoporosis pharmacologic treatment in NHs and for other older adults with multimorbidity from inappropriate inertia to appropriate prescribing or appropriate inaction.
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- 2021
34. High-Density Lipoproteins Are the Main Carriers of PCSK9 in the Circulation
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Sean A. Burnap, Wendy L. Hall, Carlos Fernández-Hernando, Manuel Mayr, Bodo Levkau, Abhishek Joshi, Sotirios Tsimikas, Sarah Berry, and Stefan Kiechl
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medicine.medical_specialty ,High density ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,Cholesterol ,PCSK9 ,fungi ,Subtilisin ,Proprotein convertase ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Kexin ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Lipoproteins, HDL ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Biomarkers ,Protein Binding ,Lipoprotein - Abstract
Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9), a secreted protein that regulates circulating low-density lipoprotein (LDL) through the hepatic LDL receptor degradation pathway, is the latest therapeutic target to further lower cholesterol in patients on maximal statin therapy ([1][1]).
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- 2020
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35. Precision Nutrition and Reliability of Continuous Glucose Monitors: Insights From the PREDICT Study
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Jose M. Ordovas, Joan Capdevila, Jordi Merino, Elco Bakker, Sarah Berry, Tim D. Spector, Paul W. Franks, Ana M. Valdes, David A. Drew, Sajaysurya Ganesh, Andrew T. Chan, and Jonathan Wolf
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Computer science ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism ,Glucose monitors ,Reliability (statistics) ,Food Science ,Reliability engineering - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The use of continuous glucose monitors (CGM) provides a more in-depth characterization of glycemic variation in response to environmental stimuli, but concerns about CGM reliability for categorizing glycemic responses to foods and meals exist. We sought to evaluate the concordance and reliability of two simultaneously worn CGM devices on postprandial glycemic responses. METHODS: We examined the correlation and coefficient of variation of the 2h glucose incremental area under the curve (iAUC) for 21,527 standardized and ad libitum meals consumed by 368 healthy participants from the PREDICT-1 Study. Included participants were simultaneously monitored with either two Abbott Freestyle Libre Pro devices (n = 339, same device group) or the combination of Abbott Freestyle Libre Pro and Dexcom G6 devices (n = 29, inter device group). Within-subject 2 h iAUC glucose meal rankings for paired CGM devices were assessed using the Kendal-tau measure for ranking concordance. RESULTS: The correlation coefficient of the 2 h glucose iAUC for paired CGM devices was 0.97 (95% CI, 0.96 to 0.97) for same device comparisons and 0.78 (0.76 to 0.80) for inter device comparisons. The coefficient of variation of the 2 h glucose iAUC for standardized meals was 5.1% (interquartile range, 2.2 to 10.1) for same device comparisons and 15.1% (5.9 to 31.2) for inter device comparisons. Similar results were observed for ad libitum meals with same and inter device coefficients of variation of 8.9% (3.3 to 21.3) and 24.2% (10.2 to 53.1%), respectively. Meal rankings for the 2 h glucose iAUC were concordant between paired CGM devices, with a mean Kendall rank correlation coefficient of 0.86 (sd = 0.07) for same device comparisons and 0.63 (sd = 0.011) for inter device comparisons. CONCLUSIONS: These data provide evidence for repeatability and concordance for ranking of glycemic responses, and suggest that factors other than CGM sensors mostly drive within-subject meal categorization. Our findings are critical for identifying sources of variability in glycemic responses for the eventual implementation of precision nutrition. FUNDING SOURCES: Zoe Global, UK Government Department of Health and Social Care, Wellcome Trust. National Institutes of Health.
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- 2021
36. Adherence to Healthy Diet and Risk and Severity of SARS-CoV-2 Infections: A Community Survey Study Within the COVID Symptom Study Application
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Mohsen Mazidi, Shilpa N Bhupathiraju, Sarah Berry, Tim D. Spector, Emily R Leeming, Benjamin J. Murray, Amit Joshi, Jonathan Wolf, Jorge E. Chavarro, Andrew T. Chan, Long H. Nguyen, Jordi Merino, and Mark Graham
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Life style ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Healthy diet ,Pathogenicity ,Pathogenic organism ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Community survey ,COVID-19 and Nutrition ,business ,Food Science - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To examine the association of adherence to a healthy diet with risk and severity of SARS-CoV-2 infections. METHODS: We included participants from the COVID Symptom Study smartphone application enrolled in March 2020 from the UK and the US who provided information about their sociodemographic characteristics and risk factors for COVID-19 at baseline, and subsequently reported any symptoms they were experiencing over follow-up. We administered a supplementary diet and lifestyle survey between August and September 2020 to ascertain diet quality before the pandemic using a validated 35-item short food frequency questionnaire. We defined incident predicted cases of COVID-19 over follow-up using a validated symptom-based model and a severe case of COVID-19 as a report of hospitalization with requirement of oxygen support. We used Cox models to calculate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for predicted COVID-19 and severe COVID-19 after adjusting for potential sociodemographic and behavioral confounders. RESULTS: Over 4,044,344 person-months of follow-up, we recorded 33,360 incident COVID-19 cases. Compared with individuals in the lowest quartile of the diet quality score, high diet quality was associated with a reduced risk of predicted COVID-19 (adjusted HR 0.94, 95% CI 0.91 to 0.97) and reduced risk of severe COVID-19 (adjusted HR 0.80, 95% CI 0.65 to 0.99). We found evidence of significant interactions between diet quality and socioeconomic status on COVID-19 risk, in which the attributable risk proportion of the joint effect due to the interaction was 30% (95% CI 2.8 to 57.2). Among participants with higher levels of socioeconomic deprivation, COVID-19 incidence rate per 1,000 person-months was 7.5% for those with low diet quality (95% CI 7.1 to 7.8) compared with 5.5% for those with a high diet quality (95% CI 5.2 to 5.9). CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that adherence to a healthy diet is associated with lower risk of COVID-19 infection and severity. The apparent beneficial association of a high-quality diet may be particularly evident among individuals with a higher levels of socioeconomic deprivation. FUNDING SOURCES: Zoe Global, UK Government Department of Health and Social Care, Wellcome Trust, Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness
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- 2021
37. Risk factors and disease profile of post-vaccination SARS-CoV-2 infection in UK users of the COVID Symptom Study app: a prospective, community-based, nested, case-control study
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Alexander Hammers, Jordi Merino, Eric Kerfoot, Rose S. Penfold, Marc F Österdahl, Christina Hu, Jonathan Wolf, Sebastien Ourselin, David A. Drew, Liyuan Chen, Emma L. Duncan, Liane S Canas, Michela Antonelli, Carole H. Sudre, Lorenzo Polidori, Somesh Selvachandran, Marc Modat, Long H. Nguyen, Sarah Berry, Mark S. Graham, Nathan J. Cheetham, Andrew T. Chan, Benjamin J. Murray, Joan Capdevila Pujol, Tim D. Spector, Jie Deng, Claire J. Steves, Erika Molteni, Kerstin Klaser, and Anna May
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vaccine Efficacy ,Disease ,Logistic regression ,Young Adult ,COVID-19 Testing ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Infection control ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Risk factor ,Aged ,business.industry ,Vaccination ,COVID-19 ,Odds ratio ,Articles ,Middle Aged ,Mobile Applications ,United Kingdom ,Clinical trial ,Infectious Diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,Nested case-control study ,Female ,Self Report ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 vaccines show excellent efficacy in clinical trials and effectiveness in real-world data, but some people still become infected with SARS-CoV-2 after vaccination. This study aimed to identify risk factors for post-vaccination SARS-CoV-2 infection and describe the characteristics of post-vaccination illness.METHODS: This prospective, community-based, nested, case-control study used self-reported data (eg, on demographics, geographical location, health risk factors, and COVID-19 test results, symptoms, and vaccinations) from UK-based, adult (≥18 years) users of the COVID Symptom Study mobile phone app. For the risk factor analysis, cases had received a first or second dose of a COVID-19 vaccine between Dec 8, 2020, and July 4, 2021; had either a positive COVID-19 test at least 14 days after their first vaccination (but before their second; cases 1) or a positive test at least 7 days after their second vaccination (cases 2); and had no positive test before vaccination. Two control groups were selected (who also had not tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 before vaccination): users reporting a negative test at least 14 days after their first vaccination but before their second (controls 1) and users reporting a negative test at least 7 days after their second vaccination (controls 2). Controls 1 and controls 2 were matched (1:1) with cases 1 and cases 2, respectively, by the date of the post-vaccination test, health-care worker status, and sex. In the disease profile analysis, we sub-selected participants from cases 1 and cases 2 who had used the app for at least 14 consecutive days after testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 (cases 3 and cases 4, respectively). Controls 3 and controls 4 were unvaccinated participants reporting a positive SARS-CoV-2 test who had used the app for at least 14 consecutive days after the test, and were matched (1:1) with cases 3 and 4, respectively, by the date of the positive test, health-care worker status, sex, body-mass index (BMI), and age. We used univariate logistic regression models (adjusted for age, BMI, and sex) to analyse the associations between risk factors and post-vaccination infection, and the associations of individual symptoms, overall disease duration, and disease severity with vaccination status.FINDINGS: Between Dec 8, 2020, and July 4, 2021, 1 240 009 COVID Symptom Study app users reported a first vaccine dose, of whom 6030 (0·5%) subsequently tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (cases 1), and 971 504 reported a second dose, of whom 2370 (0·2%) subsequently tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (cases 2). In the risk factor analysis, frailty was associated with post-vaccination infection in older adults (≥60 years) after their first vaccine dose (odds ratio [OR] 1·93, 95% CI 1·50-2·48; pINTERPRETATION: To minimise SARS-CoV-2 infection, at-risk populations must be targeted in efforts to boost vaccine effectiveness and infection control measures. Our findings might support caution around relaxing physical distancing and other personal protective measures in the post-vaccination era, particularly around frail older adults and individuals living in more deprived areas, even if these individuals are vaccinated, and might have implications for strategies such as booster vaccinations.FUNDING: ZOE, the UK Government Department of Health and Social Care, the Wellcome Trust, the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK Research and Innovation London Medical Imaging and Artificial Intelligence Centre for Value Based Healthcare, the UK National Institute for Health Research, the UK Medical Research Council, the British Heart Foundation, and the Alzheimer's Society.
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- 2021
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38. Post-vaccination SARS-CoV-2 infection: risk factors and illness profile in a prospective, observational community-based case-control study
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Lorenzo Polidori, Nathan J. Cheetham, Jie Deng, Eric Kerfoot, Marc F Österdahl, Rose S. Penfold, Michela Antonelli, Tim D. Spector, Liyuan Chen, Jordi Merino, Benjamin J. Murray, Anna May, Kerstin Klaser, Marc Modat, Long Alden Nguyen, Joan Capdeila, Emma L. Duncan, Christina Hu, Jonathan Wolf, Claire J. Steves, David A. Drew, Somesh Selvachandran, Mark Graham, Erika Molteni, Alexander Hammers, Sebastien Ourselin, Sarah Berry, Andrew T. Chan, Carole H. Sudre, and Liane S Canas
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Vaccination ,Social deprivation ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,medicine ,Infection control ,Multiple morbidities ,Social determinants of health ,Risk factor ,Lower risk ,medicine.disease ,business ,Demography - Abstract
BackgroundCOVID-19 vaccines show excellent efficacy in clinical trials and real-world data, but some people still contract SARS-CoV-2 despite vaccination. This study sought to identify risk factors associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection post-vaccination and describe characteristics of post-vaccination illness.MethodsAmongst 1,102,192 vaccinated UK adults from the COVID Symptom Study, 2394 (0.2%) cases of post-vaccination SARS-CoV-2 infection were identified between 8th December 2020 and 1st May 2021. Using a control group of vaccinated individuals testing negative, we assessed the associations of age, frailty, comorbidity, area-level deprivation and lifestyle factors with infection. Illness profile post-vaccination was assessed using a second control group of unvaccinated cases.FindingsOlder adults with frailty (OR=2.78, 95% CI=[1.98-3.89], p-valueInterpretationOur findings suggest that older individuals with frailty and those living in most deprived areas are at increased risk of infection post-vaccination. We also showed reduced symptom burden and duration in those infected post-vaccination. Efforts to boost vaccine effectiveness in at-risk populations, and to targeted infection control measures, may still be appropriate to minimise SARS-CoV-2 infection.FundingThis work is supported by UK Department of Health via the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) award to Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust in partnership with King’s College London and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and via a grant to ZOE Global; the Wellcome Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Centre for Medical Engineering at King’s College London (WT 203148/Z/16/Z). Investigators also received support from the Chronic Disease Research Foundation, the Medical Research Council (MRC), British Heart Foundation, the UK Research and Innovation London Medical Imaging & Artificial Intelligence Centre for Value Based Healthcare, the Wellcome Flagship Programme (WT213038/Z/18/Z and Alzheimer’s Society (AS-JF-17-011), and the Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness (MassCPR).Research in contextEvidence before this studyTo identify existing evidence for risk factors and characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 infection post-vaccination, we searched PubMed for peer-reviewed articles published between December 1, 2020 and May 18, 2021 using keywords (“COVID-19” OR “SARS-CoV-2”) AND (“Vaccine” OR “vaccination”) AND (“infection”) AND (“risk factor*” OR “characteristic*”). We did not restrict our search by language or type of publication. Of 202 articles identified, we found no original studies on individual risk and protective factors for COVID-19 infection following vaccination nor on nature and duration of symptoms in vaccinated, community-based individuals. Previous studies in unvaccinated populations have shown that social and occupational factors influence risk of SARS-CoV-2infection, and that personal factors (age, male sex, multiple morbidities and frailty) increased risk for adverse outcomes in COVID-19. Phase III clinical trials have demonstrated good efficacy of BNT162b2 and ChAdOx1 vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 infection, confirmed in published real-world data, which additionally showed reduced risk of adverse outcomes including hospitalisation and death.Added value of this studyThis is the first observational study investigating characteristics of and factors associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection after COVID-19 vaccination. We found that vaccinated individuals with frailty had higher rates of infection after vaccination than those without. Adverse determinants of health such as increased social deprivation, obesity, or a less healthy diet were associated with higher likelihood of infection after vaccination. In comparison with unvaccinated individuals, those with post-vaccination infection had fewer symptoms of COVID-19, and more were entirely asymptomatic. Fewer vaccinated individuals experienced five or more symptoms, required hospitalisation, and, in the older adult group, fewer had prolonged illness duration (symptoms lasting longer than 28 days).Implications of all the available evidenceSome individuals still contract COVID-19 after vaccination and our data suggest that frail older adults and those living in more deprived areas are at higher risk. However, in most individuals illness appears less severe, with reduced need for hospitalisation and lower risk of prolonged illness duration. Our results are relevant for health policy post-vaccination and highlight the need to prioritise those most at risk, whilst also emphasising the balance between the importance of personal protective measures versus adverse effects from ongoing social restrictions. Strategies such as timely prioritisation of booster vaccination and optimised infection control could be considered for at-risk groups. Research is also needed on how to enhance the immune response to vaccination in those at higher risk.
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- 2021
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39. Gut microbiome diversity and composition is associated with hypertension in women
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Jonathan Wolf, Tim D. Spector, Philippa M Wells, Nicola Segata, Francesco Asnicar, Claire J. Steves, Ana M. Valdes, Panayiotis Louca, Cristina Menni, Ana Nogal, and Sarah Berry
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16S ,hypertension ,Physiology ,Beta diversity ,Alpha (ethology) ,gut microbiome ,Blood Pressure ,Gut flora ,diversity ,Feces ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Microbiome ,ORIGINAL PAPERS: Gut bacteria and hypertension ,Ribosomal ,biology ,business.industry ,Ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Confidence interval ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Blood pressure ,Female ,Hypertension ,RNA ,Alpha diversity ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Objectives: Animal studies support a role for the gut microbiota in hypertension development, but large human studies are lacking. Here, we investigated the relationship between hypertension prevalence and gut microbial composition in two cohorts. Methods: We included 871 unrelated TwinsUK women with faecal microbiome data (16s rRNA gene sequencing). Multivariable linear models adjusted for age, age2 and BMI as well as MiRKAT models, were used to estimate the association of hypertension with alpha- and beta-diversity metrics. To identify taxa associated with hypertension, a generalized additive model for location scale and shape was computed adjusting for covariates and multiple testing. Results were replicated in 448 women from PREDICT-1. Results: We found that measures of alpha diversity are significantly lower in hypertensive cases [Beta(95% confidence interval, 95% CI) = −0.05 (−0.095 to −0.004), P = 0.03] and a significant association between beta diversity and hypertension (FDR
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- 2021
40. The impact of replacing wheat flour with cellular legume powder on starch bioaccessibility, glycaemic response and bread roll quality: A double-blind randomised controlled trial in healthy participants
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Alice van der Schoot, Balazs Bajka, Costanza Stocchi, Ana M. Pinto, Peter R. Ellis, Peter Ryden, Natalia Perez-Moral, Sarah Berry, Cathrina H. Edwards, Catherine Bland, and Jennifer Ahn-Jarvis
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food.ingredient ,Starch ,General Chemical Engineering ,Wheat flour ,PulseON® ,Glycaemic response ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Plant cell ,Ingredient ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0404 agricultural biotechnology ,food ,0103 physical sciences ,Palatability ,Food science ,Resistant starch ,Continuous glucose monitoring ,Legume ,Type 1 resistant starch ,010304 chemical physics ,Chemistry ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Chemistry ,Bread ,Carbohydrate ,040401 food science ,Digestion ,Food Science - Abstract
The global rise in obesity and type 2 diabetes has generated significant interest in regulating the glycaemic impact of staple foods. Wheat breads (white or wholemeal) are popular staples, but have a high-glycaemic index, due to the highly digestible wheat starch. Reducing the glycaemic potency of white bread is challenging because the bread-making conditions are mostly conducive to starch gelatinisation. Cellular legume powders are a new source of type 1 resistant starch, where the starch is encapsulated by dietary fibre in the form of intact plant cell walls. The starch in these cell powders is less susceptible to gelatinisation and digestion than starch in conventional legume flours. However, legume cell resilience to baking conditions and the effects of this ingredient on glycaemic responses and product quality are unknown. Here we show that the integrity of cell wall fibre in chickpea powder was preserved on baking and this led to a ~40% reduction in in vivo glycaemic responses (iAUC120) to white bread rolls (~50 g available carbohydrate and 12 g wheat protein per serving) when 30% or 60% (w/w) of the wheat flour was replaced with intact cell powder. Significant reductions in glycaemic responses were achieved without adverse effects on bread texture, appearance or palatability. Starch digestibility analysis and microscopy confirmed the importance of cell integrity in attenuating glycaemic responses. Alternative processing methods that preserve cell integrity are a new, promising way to provide healthier low glycaemic staple foods; we anticipate that this will improve dietary options for diabetes care., Graphical abstract Image 1, Highlights • Intact cell powder (ICP): a new legume ingredient increased type 1 resistant starch in bread rolls. • ICP lowered starch bioaccessibility and glycaemic response of wheat bread rolls. • Legume cell integrity was retained after baking and digestion. • Wheat breads incorporating ICP had acceptable quality attributes.
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- 2021
41. Staging the Lyric : Modern and Contemporary Experiments with Verse Drama
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Sarah Berry and Sarah Berry
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- Verse drama, English--History and criticism, Verse drama, American--History and criticism, Theater--History.--Great Britain, Theater--History.--United States
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Verse drama is not a dead form, but very much alive on the contemporary stage. Drawing on plays from throughout the English-speaking world, including the United States, United Kingdom, Ireland, and the Caribbean, Staging the Lyric seeks to explain the 21st-century resurgence of Anglophone verse drama, tracing it back to an experimental impulse that is present in the modernist verse drama of a century ago. Covering major writers including Derek Walcott, Seamus Heaney, Sylvia Plath, Samuel Beckett, Dorothy Sayers, Djuna Barnes, and Ntozake Shange, it also encompasses lesser known and more recent poets and playwrights. This modern verse drama differs from its ancient and Elizabethan antecedents as it is understood not as a genre in its own right, but as a hybrid of the lyric and the dramatic. Both modernist and contemporary writers take advantage of this hybridity as fertile ground for experimentation. While they differ in their ideology and form, this book contends that they are united by exploring the relationship between lyric and dramatic elements on stage and what these two different modes afford. To demonstrate this continuity, it traces a genealogy from contemporary plays by Joanna Laurens, Joyelle McSweeney, and David Grieg back to W.B. Yeats, Gertrude Stein, T.S. Eliot, and W.H. Auden, to reveal that the tensions that animate verse drama have stayed the same, even as the strategies for staging them have evolved. The book is divided into three sections-'Voice,''Words,'and'Time'-each treating one feature that has been used to define the lyric. Within these sections, the chapters compare contemporary plays with modernist ones that experiment with the same point of tension between the lyric and the dramatic.
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- 2024
42. Impact of COVID-19 on health behaviours and body weight: A prospective observational study in a cohort of 1.1 million UK and US individuals
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Somesh Selvachandran, Tim D. Spector, Paul W. Franks, Emily R Leeming, Long H. Nguyen, Kirstin Kadé, Jordi Merino, Claire J. Steves, Rachel J. Gibson, Mohsen Mazidii, Carole H. Sudre, Sarah Berry, Sebastien Ourselin, Christina Hu, Benjamin J. Murray, Mark S. Graham, Tyler Maher, Christopher D. Gardner, David A. Drew, Jonathan Wolf, and Andrew T. Chan
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Cohort ,Medicine ,Observational study ,business ,Body weight - Abstract
Evidence regarding the impact of COVID-19 on health behaviours is limited. In this prospective study including 1.1 million UK and US participants we collected diet and lifestyle data ‘pre-’ and ‘peri-’ pandemic, and computed a bi-directional health behaviour disruption index. We show that disruption was higher in the younger, female and socioeconomically deprived (p
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- 2021
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43. Fifteen-minute guide: Vitamin K administration in neonates: the challenges clinicians face
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David G Sweet, Anne Haddick, and Sarah Berry
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Vitamin ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vitamin K ,Protein S ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Vitamin K deficiency ,medicine ,Humans ,Neonatology ,Family history ,biology ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,biology.protein ,Gestation ,Age of onset ,business ,Protein C ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A mother of a baby boy born at 36 weeks’ gestation is declining vitamin K administration. The baby is well and has no family history. The mother says that there is not enough evidence to prove that vitamin K works and is worried about the risk of cancer. The clinician’s job is to present and weigh up the current evidence on neonatal administration of vitamin K. Vitamin K deficiency bleeding (VKDB) is a rare but potentially fatal haemostatic disorder. It manifests as bleeding at multiple sites in otherwise healthy infants.1 It occurs in the first 6 months of life and is almost entirely preventable by administration of vitamin K prophylaxis at birth. As bleeding can occur until 6 months of age, the previous term haemorrhagic disease of new-born was replaced by VKDB.2 It is subclassified according to the age of onset of bleeding; early (within the first 24 hours), classical (days 1–7) and late (week 1–6 months of age).1 Vitamin K represents a group of essential cofactors for the activation of proteins which are involved in blood coagulation, including factor II, VII, IX, X, protein C, protein S and protein Z.3 Vitamin K is necessary for the synthesis of coagulation factors in the liver.4 Babies are deficient in vitamin K at birth, therefore leading to the increased risk of bleeding. Most vitamin K in adults and children is sourced through the diet, for example, leafy green vegetables.3 Neonates acquire their vitamin K by transfer through the placenta. The rate of this transfer is extremely low.5 Preterm infants are at an even greater risk of vitamin K deficiency due to various factors, including delayed feeding and therefore delayed gastric colonisation with microflora which produce vitamin K.4 The immature …
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- 2021
44. High intake of vegetables is linked to lower white blood cell profile and the effect is mediated by the gut microbiome
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Stuart Astbury, Cristina Menni, Panayiotis Louca, Tim D. Spector, Jonathan Wolf, Emily R Leeming, Ana M. Valdes, Rachel J. Gibson, Nicola Segata, Francesco Asnicar, Amrita Vijay, Sarah Berry, Massimo Mangino, Richard Davies, and Gianmarco Piccinno
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Lymphocyte ,lcsh:Medicine ,Physiology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Leukocyte Count ,0302 clinical medicine ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Ruminococcus ,Vegetables ,Leukocytes ,White blood cell, Gut microbiome, Diet, Vegetable intake, Chronic inflammation ,2. Zero hunger ,Clostridiales ,biology ,Fatty liver ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Fasting ,General Medicine ,Chronic inflammation ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Actinobacteria ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,Adult ,Inflammation ,03 medical and health sciences ,White blood cell ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymphocyte Count ,Interleukin 6 ,Collinsella ,Clostridium ,Gut microbiome ,Mediation Analysis ,Interleukin-6 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Diet ,030104 developmental biology ,Vegetable intake ,Fruit ,biology.protein ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background Chronic inflammation, which can be modulated by diet, is linked to high white blood cell counts and correlates with higher cardiometabolic risk and risk of more severe infections, as in the case of COVID-19. Methods Here, we assessed the association between white blood cell profile (lymphocytes, basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils, monocytes and total white blood cells) as markers of chronic inflammation, habitual diet and gut microbiome composition (determined by sequencing of the 16S RNA) in 986 healthy individuals from the PREDICT-1 nutritional intervention study. We then investigated whether the gut microbiome mediates part of the benefits of vegetable intake on lymphocyte counts. Results Higher levels of white blood cells, lymphocytes and basophils were all significantly correlated with lower habitual intake of vegetables, with vegetable intake explaining between 3.59 and 6.58% of variation in white blood cells after adjusting for covariates and multiple testing using false discovery rate (q Collinsella, known to increase with the intake of processed foods and previously associated with fatty liver disease. We further correlated white blood cells to other inflammatory markers including IL6 and GlycA, fasting and post-prandial glucose levels and found a significant relationship between inflammation and diet. Conclusion A habitual diet high in vegetables, but not fruits, is linked to a lower inflammatory profile for white blood cells, and a fifth of the effect is mediated by the genus Collinsella. Trial registration The ClinicalTrials.gov registration identifier is NCT03479866.
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- 2021
45. Palmitic acid-rich oils with and without interesterification lower postprandial lipemia and increase atherogenic lipoproteins compared with a MUFA-rich oil: A randomized controlled trial
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Wendy L. Hall, Barbara A. Fielding, Peter J. Wilde, Scott V Harding, Sarah Berry, Charlotte E. Mills, Giuseppina Mandalari, Louise J. Salt, Mariam Bapir, and Robert Gray
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Male ,healthy adults ,interesterification ,lipid ,metabolism ,palmitic acid ,postprandial lipemia ,rapeseed oil ,Interesterified fat ,Lipoproteins ,Palmitic Acid ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Hyperlipidemias ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated ,AcademicSubjects/MED00160 ,Palmitic acid ,AcademicSubjects/MED00060 ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dietary Fats, Unsaturated ,Double-Blind Method ,Chylomicrons ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Food science ,Triglycerides ,Aged ,Cross-Over Studies ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Lipid metabolism ,Middle Aged ,Atherosclerosis ,Postprandial Period ,Palm stearin ,Original Research Communications ,Postprandial ,chemistry ,Low-density lipoprotein ,Female ,Apolipoprotein B-48 ,Digestion ,Lipoprotein - Abstract
Background: Interesterified (IE) fats are widely used in place of trans fats; however, little is known about their metabolism. Objective: To test the impact of a commonly consumed IE versus a non-IE equivalent fat on in vivo postprandial and in vitro lipid metabolism, compared with a reference oil (rapeseed oil; RO). Design: A double-blinded, 3-phase crossover, randomized controlled trial was performed in healthy adults (n=20) aged 45-75 years. Postprandial plasma triacylglycerol (TG) and lipoprotein responses (including stable isotope tracing) to a test meal (50g fat) were evaluated over 8 hours. The test fats were IE 80:20 palm stearin/palm kernel fat, an identical non-IE fat, and RO (control). In vitro, mechanisms of digestion were explored using a dynamic gastric model (DGM). Results: Plasma TG 8h incremental area under the curves were lower following non-IE versus RO (-1.7 mmol/L.h (95% confidence interval -3.3, -0.0)), but there were no differences between IE and RO nor IE and non-IE. Low density lipoprotein (LDL) particles were smaller following IE and non-IE versus RO (P=0.005). Extra, extra large (XXL)-, extra large (XL)- and large (L)- VLDL particle concentrations were higher following IE and non-IE versus RO at 6-8 h (P
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- 2021
46. Blue poo: Impact of gut transit time on the gut microbiome using a novel marker
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Richard Davies, George Hadjigeorgiou, Sarah Berry, Mohsen Mazidi, Elco Bakker, Tim D. Spector, Paul W. Franks, Emily R Leeming, Lucy Francis, Rachel J. Gibson, Ana M. Valdes, Eirini Dimidi, Nicola Segata, Francesco Asnicar, Andrew T. Chan, Haya Al Khatib, and Jonathan Wolf
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Transit time ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Gut flora ,Feces ,03 medical and health sciences ,Taxonomic composition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bacteroides ,Humans ,Microbiome ,gastrointestinal transit ,Coloring Agents ,Gastrointestinal Transit ,Alistipes ,Bacteroidetes ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Gastroenterology ,Akkermansia ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,intestinal bacteria ,Gut microbiome ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,030104 developmental biology ,Metagenomics ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Biomarkers ,Akkermansia muciniphila - Abstract
Background and aimsGut transit time is a key modulator of host–microbiome interactions, yet this is often overlooked, partly because reliable methods are typically expensive or burdensome. The aim of this single-arm, single-blinded intervention study is to assess (1) the relationship between gut transit time and the human gut microbiome, and (2) the utility of the ‘blue dye’ method as an inexpensive and scalable technique to measure transit time.MethodsWe assessed interactions between the taxonomic and functional potential profiles of the gut microbiome (profiled via shotgun metagenomic sequencing), gut transit time (measured via the blue dye method), cardiometabolic health and diet in 863 healthy individuals from the PREDICT 1 study.ResultsWe found that gut microbiome taxonomic composition can accurately discriminate between gut transit time classes (0.82 area under the receiver operating characteristic curve) and longer gut transit time is linked with specific microbial species such as Akkermansia muciniphila, Bacteroides spp and Alistipes spp (false discovery rate-adjusted p values ConclusionsGut transit time, measured via the blue dye method, is a more informative marker of gut microbiome function than traditional measures of stool consistency and frequency. The blue dye method can be applied in large-scale epidemiological studies to advance diet-microbiome-health research. Clinical trial registry website https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03479866 and trial number NCT03479866.
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- 2021
47. Meal-induced inflammation: postprandial insights from the Personalised REsponses to DIetary Composition Trial (PREDICT) study in 1000 participants
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Nicola Segata, Sarah Berry, Jose M. Ordovas, Ana M. Valdes, Mohsen Mazidi, Jonathan Wolf, Joan Capdevila Pujol, George Hadjigeorgiou, Naveed Sattar, Robert W. Koivula, Wendy L. Hall, Tim D. Spector, and Paul W. Franks
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Mendelian randomization ,medicine ,visceral fat mass ,glycoprotein acetylation ,inflammation ,postprandial glycemia ,postprandial lipemia ,Acetylation ,Biomarkers ,Female ,Glycoproteins ,Humans ,Inflammation ,Lipid Metabolism ,Lipids ,Middle Aged ,Diet ,Meals ,Postprandial Period ,Interleukin 6 ,Meal ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Framingham Risk Score ,Triglyceride ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Postprandial ,chemistry ,Cohort ,biology.protein ,business - Abstract
Background Meal-induced metabolic changes trigger an acute inflammatory response, contributing to chronic inflammation and associated diseases. Objectives We aimed to characterize variability in postprandial inflammatory responses using traditional (IL-6) and novel [glycoprotein acetylation (GlycA)] biomarkers of inflammation and dissect their biological determinants with a focus on postprandial glycemia and lipemia. Methods Postprandial (0-6 h) glucose, triglyceride (TG), IL-6, and GlycA responses were measured at multiple intervals after sequential mixed-nutrient meals (0 h and 4 h) in 1002 healthy adults aged 18-65 y from the PREDICT (Personalised REsponses to DIetary Composition Trial) 1 study, a single-arm dietary intervention study. Measures of habitual diet, blood biochemistry, gut microbiome composition, and visceral fat mass (VFM) were also collected. Results The postprandial changes in GlycA and IL-6 concentrations were highly variable between individuals. Participants eliciting an increase in GlycA and IL-6 (60% and 94% of the total participants, respectively) had mean 6-h increases of 11% and 190%, respectively. Peak postprandial TG and glucose concentrations were significantly associated with 6-h GlycA (r = 0.83 and r = 0.24, respectively; both P 0.26). A random forest model revealed the maximum TG concentration was the strongest postprandial TG predictor of postprandial GlycA and structural equation modeling revealed that VFM and fasting TG were most strongly associated with fasting and postprandial GlycA. Network Mendelian randomization demonstrated a causal link between VFM and fasting GlycA, mediated (28%) by fasting TG. Individuals eliciting enhanced GlycA responses had higher predicted cardiovascular disease risk (using the atherosclerotic disease risk score) than the rest of the cohort. Conclusions The variable postprandial increases in GlycA and their associations with TG metabolism highlight the importance of modulating TG in concert with obesity to reduce GlycA and associated low-grade inflammation-related diseases.This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03479866.
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- 2021
48. Social Jetlag Is Associated With Poor Diet and Increased Inflammation in the ZOE PREDICT 1 Cohort
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Kate Bermingham, Sophie Stensrud, Ana Valdes, Paul Franks, Andrew Chan, Jonathan Wolf, Tim Spector, Sarah Berry, and Wendy Hall
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
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49. Postprandial and Fasting Metabolic Signatures: Insights From the ZOE PREDICT 1 Study
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Inbar Linenberg, Kate Bermingham, Mohsen Mazidi, Ana Valdes, Paul Franks, Andrew Chan, Jonathan Wolf, Tim Spector, Jose Ordovas, Wendy Hall, and Sarah Berry
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
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50. Menopause Is a Key Factor Influencing Postprandial Metabolism, Metabolic Health and Lifestyle: The ZOE PREDICT Study
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Kate Bermingham, Inbar Linenberg, Ana Valdes, Wendy Hall, JoAnn Manson, Louise Newson, Andrew Chan, Kirstin Kade, Paul Franks, Jonathan Wolf, Tim Spector, and Sarah Berry
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Food Science - Published
- 2022
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