Comparison of Fatty Acid Profile in Plasma Phospholipids in Women from Granada (southern Spain) and Malmö (southern Sweden)

Author:

Chajès Véronique1,Elmståhl Solve2,Martinez-Garcia Carmen3,Van Kappel Anne Linda4,Bianchini Franca4,Kaaks Rudolf4,Riboli Elio4

Affiliation:

1. Université François Rabelais, 2 bis, boulevard Tonnellé, 37032 Tours Cedex, France

2. Department of Community Medicine, Lund University, Malmö University Hospital, S-20502 Malmö, Sweden, UPRES-EA 2103

3. Granada Cancer Registry, Escuela Andaluza de Salud Publica, E-18080 Granada, Spain

4. Unit of Nutrition and Cancer, International Agency for Research on Cancer, 150 cours Albert Thomas, 69372 Lyon Cédex 08, France

Abstract

We conducted a first pilot study on healthy women living in two countries with different dietary habits, Granada in the south of Spain and Malmö in the south of Sweden, in order to compare their levels of plasma phospholipid fatty acids, and to examine the relationship between the differences in food consumption. This study is part of a pilot study which is nested in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition, a multi-centre prospective cohort study on diet, plasma concentrations of antioxidants and fatty acids, and markers of oxidative stress. Thirty-nine women in Granada and thirty-eight women in Malmö, aged 45–50 years (all pre-menopausal) were selected among the female participants in the cohorts from these two countries. Individual measurements of the women’s habitual diet were obtained by a food frequency questionnaire. 24-hour diet recalls were used for the standardised measurement of diet at group level. Plasma phospholipid fatty acid composition was determined by capillary gas chromatography. We found a different fatty acid profile in plasma between the two populations, with higher mean levels of palmitic acid (16:0), palmitoleic acid (16:1) (n-7), oleic acid (18:1), alpha-linolenic acid (18:3) (n-3) and eicosapentaenoic acid (20:5) (n-3), and lower mean levels of stearic acid (18:0) in Malmö compared to Granada. Women in Malmö consumed more meat, alcoholic beverages and sugar, and less fish and shellfish than women in Granada. We conclude that the fatty acid composition in plasma phospholipids is different between women from the two European centres. For polyunsaturated fatty acids, differences were observed for (n-3) fatty acids. In relation to these differences, we observed that specific food intakes, particularly meat and fish, varied between the two centres.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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