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Oral Session
Aging and Chronic Disease
Nutritional Epidemiology
Hyunju Kim, MPH
Johns Hopkins University
Casey Rebholz, PhD, MS, MPH, MNSP
Johns Hopkins University
Vanessa Garcia-Larsen, PhD
Johns Hopkins University
Lyn Steffen, PhD, MPH
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Josef Coresh, MD
Johns Hopkins University
Laura Caulfield, PhD
Professor
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg SPH
Objectives : Recently, several distinct diet indices have been developed to characterize adherence to plant-based diets. We deconstructed and compared 6 plant-based diet indices (PDI) in a community-based cohort with respect to their scoring and their associations with incident hypertension.
Methods : Using food frequency questionnaire data from middle-aged adults (n=8,041) without hypertension in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study, we constructed overallPDI, healthyPDI, unhealthyPDI, provegetarian diet index, PDI from Rotterdam Study (PDI-Rotterdam), and comprehensive diet quality index (cDQI). For the overallPDI, provegetarian diet index, and PDI-Rotterdam, higher intakes of all or selected plant foods received higher scores. For the healthyPDI, higher intakes of plant foods identified as healthful received higher scores. For the unhealthyPDI, higher intakes of plant foods identified as unhealthful received higher scores. For the cDQI, higher intakes of healthful plant foods, dairy, and seafood received higher scores, but all other indices scored higher intakes of animal foods uniformly lower. We examined the magnitude of correlations and agreement between all pairs of indices, and assessed whether higher scores on these indices were associated with hypertension using Cox proportional hazard models, adjusting for socio-demographic factors, other dietary factors, and health behaviors.
Results : All indices had moderate to strong correlations (r >0.4) and largely consistent rankings of subjects except for the PDI-Rotterdam and unhealthyPDI. Differences existed in how alcohol, potatoes, poultry, eggs, and dairy were scored. Greater adherence to overallPDI, healthyPDI, provegetarian diet, and cDQI was associated with a 9-26% lower risk of hypertension compared to lesser adherence (all P-trend< 0.05, Table). Greater adherence to the unhealthyPDI was associated with a 12% higher risk (P-trend=0.03) when clinical factors were additionally adjusted; no association was observed with the PDI-Rotterdam.
Conclusions : Analyses revealed moderate agreement in ranking across subjects, suggesting that they are capturing similar dietary patterns. However, the way in which plant-based diets are operationalized can affect the ability to detect diet-disease associations.
Funding Sources : IH Departmental Scholarship, NIDDK and NHLBI