Associations Between the Modified Food Standard Agency Nutrient Profiling System Dietary Index and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in an Elderly Population
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Front of pack food labeling Cardiovascular risk factor Body weight FSAm-NPS dietary index PREDIMED-Plus study
Date
2022-07-14Referencia bibliográfica
Khoury N... [et al.] (2022) Associations Between the Modified Food Standard Agency Nutrient Profiling System Dietary Index and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in an Elderly Population. Front. Nutr. 9:897089. doi: [10.3389/fnut.2022.897089]
Sponsorship
official Spanish Institutions; European Commission PI13/00673 PI13/00492 PI13/00272 PI13/01123 PI13/00462 PI13/00233 PI13/02184 PI13/00728 PI13/01090 PI13/01056 PI14/01722 PI14/00636 PI14/00618; The European Regional Development Fund PI16/01120 PI17/00764 PI17/01183 PI17/00855 PI17/01347 PI17/00525 PI17/01827 PI17/00532 PI17/00215 PI17/01441 PI17/00508; Especial Action Project entitled: Implementacion y evaluacion de una intervencion intensiva sobre la actividad fisica Cohorte PREDIMED-Plus; European Research Council (ERC) European Commission 340918; La Caixa Foundation 2013ACUP00194; Junta de Andalucia PI0458/2013 PS0358/2016 PI0137/2018; Center for Forestry Research & Experimentation (CIEF); European Commission; SEMERGEN grant; ICREA under the ICREA Academia program; Agencia de Gestio d'Ajuts Universitaris de Recerca (AGAUR FI) 2021FI_B 00145; Sara Borrell CD21/00045 PI20/00138 PI20/01532 PI20/00456 PI20/00339 PI20/00557 PI20/00886 PI20/01158 PI17/01732 PI17/00926 PI19/00957 PI19/00386 PI19/00309 PI19/01032 PI19/00576 PI19/00017 PI19/01226 PI19/00781 PI19/01560 PI19/01332 PI20/01802 PI14/00696 PI14/01206 PI14/01919 PI14/00853 PI14/01374 PI14/00972 PI14/00728 PI14/01471 PI16/00473 PI16/00662 PI16/01873 PI16/01094 PI16/00501 PI16/00533 PI16/00381 PI16/00366 PI16/01522Abstract
Background: Helping consumers to improve the nutritional quality of their diet is
a key public health action to prevent cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). The modified
version of the Food Standard Agency Nutrient Profiling System Dietary Index (FSAm-
NPS DI) underpinning the Nutri-Score front-of-pack label has been used in public
health strategies to address the deleterious consequences of poor diets. This study
aimed to assess the association between the FSAm-NPS DI and some CVD risk
factors including body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, plasma glucose levels,
triglyceride levels, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL)
cholesterol, and diastolic and systolic blood pressure.
Materials and Methods: Dietary intake was assessed at baseline and after
1 year of follow-up using a 143-item validated semi-quantitative food-frequency
questionnaire. Dietary indices based on FSAm-NPS applied at an individual level were
computed to characterize the diet quality of 5,921 participants aged 55–75 years
with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome from the PREDIMED-plus cohort.
Associations between the FSAm-NPS DI and CVD risk factors were assessed using
linear regression models.
Results: Compared to participants with a higher nutritional quality of diet (measured by
a lower FSAm-NPS DI at baseline or a decrease in FSAm-NPS DI after 1 year), those
participants with a lower nutritional quality of diet (higher FSAm-NPS DI or an increase
in score) showed a significant increase in the levels of plasma glucose, triglycerides,
diastolic blood pressure, BMI, and waist circumference (b coefficient [95% confidence
interval]; P for trend) (1.67 [0.43, 2.90]; <0.001; 6.27 [2.46, 10.09]; <0.001; 0.56 [0.08,
1.05]; 0.001; 0.51 [0.41, 0.60]; <0.001; 1.19 [0.89, 1.50]; <0.001, respectively). No
significant associations in relation to changes in HDL and LDL-cholesterol nor with
systolic blood pressure were shown.
Conclusion: This prospective cohort study suggests that the consumption of food
items with a higher FSAm-NPS DI is associated with increased levels of several major
risk factors for CVD including adiposity, fasting plasma glucose, triglycerides, and
diastolic blood pressure. However, results must be cautiously interpreted because no
significant prospective associations were identified for critical CVD risk factors, such as
HDL and LDL-cholesterol, and systolic blood pressure.