Reproducibility and dietary correlates of plasma polyphenols in the JPHC-NEXT Protocol Area study

Author:

Murphy Neil1,Sawada Norie2ORCID,Achaintre David1,Yamaji Taiki3,Scalbert Augustin1,Ishihara Junko4ORCID,Takachi Ribeka5,Nakamura Kazutoshi6,Tanaka Junta6ORCID,Iwasaki Motoki7,Iso Hiroyasu8,Inoue Manami9ORCID,Gunter Marc10,Tsugane Shoichiro9ORCID,Mori Nagisa11

Affiliation:

1. International Agency for Research on Cancer

2. National Cancer Center Institute for Cancer Control

3. National Cancer Center

4. Azabu University

5. Nara Women's University

6. Niigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences

7. National Cancer Center, Research Center for Cancer Prevention and Screening

8. Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine

9. National Cancer Center Japan

10. Imperial College London

11. National Institutes of Biomedical Innovation, Health and Nutrition

Abstract

Abstract Background In recent years, an increasing number of epidemiological studies have suggested a role of polyphenols in the prevention of chronic diseases. Prospective cohort studies have typically measured polyphenol concentrations in a single blood sample and the reproducibility of plasma polyphenol measurements is largely unknown.Objective We evaluated the reproducibility of 35 plasma polyphenols collected at an interval of 1-year. We also examined correlations of these polyphenols with food group intakes calculated from weighed food records (WFR) and food frequency questionnaire (FFQ).Methods The study included 227 middle-aged participants from the JPHC-NEXT Protocol Area in Japan. We measured 35 polyphenols in plasma collected at two points 1-year apart. Food group intakes were calculated from 12-day WFR and FFQ. For the reproducibility analysis, the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of 35 polyphenol concentrations were examined between the two points. Pearson’s partial correlations was used to assess the correlation between polyphenols and food groups.Results Highest ICCs were observed for enterodiol and tea-originated polyphenols - such as gallic acid, quercetin, epigallocatechin, and kaempferol - and coffee-derived polyphenols, such as caffeic acid, and ferulic acid. For the dietary analyses, moderate correlations were observed for non-alcoholic beverages intake and epigallocatechin, epicatechin, catechin, and gallic acid. For green tea, higher correlations were observed with these polyphenols.Conclusion Plasma concentrations of tea and coffee related polyphenols had good reproducibility over a 1-year period. The correlations between intake of non-alcoholic beverages, particularly green tea, and tea polyphenols, indicated moderate- to high correlations.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference34 articles.

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