Autor segons l'article: Salas-Salvadó, J.; Amor, AJ.; Serra-Mir, M.; Martínez-González, MA.; Corella, D.; Fitó, M.; Estruch, R.; Serra-Majem, L.; Arós, F.; Babio, N.; Ros, E.; Ortega, E.
Departament: Bioquímica i Biotecnologia
Autor/s de la URV: SALAS SALVADÓ, JORGE; Amor, AJ.; Serra-Mir, M.; Martínez-González, MA.; Corella, D.; Fitó, M.; Estruch, R.; Serra-Majem, L.; Arós, F.; BABIO SÁNCHEZ, NANCY ELVIRA; Ros, E.; Ortega, E.
Paraules clau: Mediterranean diet Cardiovascular risk prediction cardiovascular disease
Resum: Background-—The usefulness of cardiovascular disease (CVD) predictive equations in different populations is debatable. We
assessed the efficacy of the Framingham-REGICOR scale, validated for the Spanish population, to identify future CVD in
participants, who were predefined as being at high-risk in the PREvencion con DIeta MEDiterranea (PREDIMED) study—a
nutrition-intervention primary prevention trial—and the impact of adherence to the Mediterranean diet on CVD across risk
categories.
Methods and Results-—In a post hoc analysis, we assessed the CVD predictive value of baseline estimated risk in 5966 PREDIMED
participants (aged 55–74 years, 57% women; 48% with type 2 diabetes mellitus). Major CVD events, the primary PREDIMED end
point, were an aggregate of myocardial infarction, stroke, and cardiovascular death. Multivariate-adjusted Cox regression was used
to calculate hazard ratios for major CVD events and effect modification from the Mediterranean diet intervention across risk strata
(low, moderate, high, very high). The Framingham-REGICOR classification of PREDIMED participants was 25.1% low risk, 44.5%
moderate risk, and 30.4% high or very high risk. During 6-year follow-up, 188 major CVD events occurred. Hazard ratios for major
CVD events increased in parallel with estimated risk (2.68, 4.24, and 6.60 for moderate, high, and very high risk), particularly in
men (7.60, 13.16, and 15.85, respectively, versus 2.16, 2.28, and 3.51, respectively, in women). Yet among those with low or
moderate risk, 32.2% and 74.3% of major CVD events occurred in men and women, respectively. Mediterranean diet adherence
was associated with CVD risk reduction regardless of risk strata (P>0.4 for interaction).
Conclusions-—Incident CVD increased in parallel with estimated risk in the PREDIMED cohort, but most events occurred in non–
high-risk categories, particularly in women. Until predictive tools are improved, promotion of the Mediterranean diet might be
useful to reduce CVD independent of baseline risk.
Grup de recerca: Alimentació, Nutrició, Creixement i Salut Mental
Àrees temàtiques: Health sciences Ciencias de la salud Ciències de la salut
Accès a la llicència d'ús: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
ISSN: 2047-9980
Identificador de l'autor: 0000-0003-2700-7459 ; 0000-0003-3527-5277
Data d'alta del registre: 2018-06-22
Volum de revista: 6
Versió de l'article dipositat: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
URL Document de llicència: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Entitat: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Any de publicació de la revista: 2017
Tipus de publicació: Article Artículo Article