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Dietary vitamin D intake, cardiovascular disease and cardiometabolic risk factors: a sex-based analysis from the ATTICA cohort study

Authors :
Ekavi N. Georgousopoulou
Christine Chrysohoou
Demosthenes B. Panagiotakos
Christos Pitsavos
Mary Yannakoulia
Dimitrios Tousoulis
Matina Kouvari
Source :
Journal of human nutrition and dietetics : the official journal of the British Dietetic AssociationReferences. 33(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

BACKGROUND The present study aimed to evaluate the association between dietary vitamin D intake and 10-year first fatal/nonfatal cardiovascular disease (CVD), conventional CVD risk factors and surrogate markers related to inflammation, coagulation, insulin resistance, liver and renal function. METHODS The ATTICA study was conducted during 2001-2012 including 1514 men and 1528 women (aged >18 years) from the greater Athens area, Greece. Dietary assessment was based on a validated semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. Daily intake of vitamin D was calculated using a standardised food database. Follow-up (2011-2012) was achieved in 2020 participants (n = 317 cases). RESULTS Ranking from first to third vitamin D tertile, CVD events were 24%, 17% and 12% for men (P = 0.002) and 14%, 10% and 11% for women (P = 0.59). Inverse associations between vitamin D and CVD in total sample [hazard ratio (HR) = 0.76 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.60-0.97] and in men (HR = 0.66 95% CI = 0.49-0.89) were observed, and lost after adjusting for inflammation/coagulation markers; for women, no significant trends were observed. Regarding 10-year onset of conventional risk factors, inverse associations of vitamin D with hypertension in men (HR = 0.62 95% CI = 0.39-0.99) and transition to metabolically unhealthy status in women (HR = 0.69 95% CI = 0.51-0.93) were observed. Significant inverse associations for C-reactive protein, interleukin-6 and fibrinogen in both sexes, whereas these were revealed only in women for insulin resistance. CONCLUSIONS Contradicting the neutral/modest associations in vitamin-D supplementation trials, increased food-generated vitamin D may protect against hard and intermediate CVD endpoints, implying different paths between sexes.

Details

ISSN :
1365277X and 20012012
Volume :
33
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of human nutrition and dietetics : the official journal of the British Dietetic AssociationReferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9c86a9faa682dea96edb4f65e3b70987