Dietary intake of potassium, vitamin E, and vitamin C emerges as the most significant predictors of cardiovascular disease risk in adults

Author:

Wang Yue12,Han Liyuan34,Ling Shiliang5,Sha Yuyi6,Sun Hongpeng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Health, Medical College of Soochow University, Suzhou, China

2. Stomatology Hospital affiliated to Suzhou Vocational Health College, Suzhou, China

3. Key Laboratory of Diagnosis and Treatment of Digestive System Tumors of Zhejiang Province, Ningbo No.2 Hospital, Ningbo, China

4. Center for Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Epidemiology and Translational Medicine, Ningbo Institute of Life and Health Industry, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Ningbo, China

5. Department of Oncology, Ningbo Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ningbo, China

6. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Ningbo No.2 Hospital, Ningbo, China.

Abstract

Prediction models were developed to assess the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) based on micronutrient intake, utilizing data from 90,167 UK Biobank participants. Four machine learning models were employed to predict CVD risk, with performance evaluation metrics including area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), accuracy, recall, specificity, and F1-score. The eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) model was utilized to rank the importance of 11 micronutrients in cardiovascular health. Results indicated that vitamin E, calcium, vitamin C, and potassium intake were associated with a reduced risk of CVD. The XGBoost model demonstrated the highest performance with an AUC of 0.952, highlighting potassium, vitamin E, and vitamin C as key predictors of CVD risk. Subgroup analysis revealed a stronger correlation between calcium intake and CVD risk in older adults and those with higher BMI, while vitamin B6 intake showed a link to CVD risk in women. Overall, the XGBoost model emphasized the significance of potassium, vitamin E, and vitamin C intake as primary predictors of CVD risk in adults, with age, sex, and BMI potentially influencing the importance of micronutrient intake in predicting CVD risk.

Funder

Ningbo science project

Ningbo medical and health brand discipline

the Public Welfare Foundation of Ningbo

Ningbo Clinical Research Center for Medical Imaging

Provincial and Municipal Co-construction Key Discipline for Medical Imaging

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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