Relationship Between Dietary Magnesium Intake and Incident Heart Failure Among Older Women: The WHI

Author:

Wu Wen‐Chih12ORCID,Huang Mengna3,Taveira Tracey H.14,Roberts Mary B.5,Martin Lisa W.6,Wellenius Gregory A.2,Johnson Karen C.7,Manson JoAnn E.8,Liu Simin2,Eaton Charles B.52

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cardiology Veterans Affairs Medical Center & The Miriam Hospital Alpert Medical School Brown University Providence RI

2. Department of Epidemiology Brown University School of Public Health Providence RI

3. Channing Division of Network Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA

4. University of Rhode Island, College of Pharmacy Kingston RI

5. Center for Primary Care and Prevention and the Department of Family Medicine Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island Pawtucket RI

6. Division of Cardiology George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences Washington DC

7. Department of Preventive Medicine University of Tennessee Health Science Center Memphis TN

8. Brigham and Women's Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA

Abstract

Background Women represent a large proportion of the growing heart failure ( HF ) epidemic, yet data are lacking regarding optimal dietary and lifestyle prevention strategies for them. Specifically, the association between magnesium intake and HF in a multiracial cohort of women is uncertain. Methods and Results We included 97 725 postmenopausal women from the WHI (Women's Health Initiative) observational studies and placebo arms of the hormone trial. Magnesium intake was measured at baseline by a 122‐item validated food‐frequency questionnaire and stratified into quartiles based on diet only, total intake (diet with supplements), and residual intake (calibration by total energy). Incident hospitalized HF (2153 events, median follow‐up 8.1 years) was adjudicated by medical record abstraction. In Cox proportional hazards models, we evaluated the association between magnesium intake and HF adjusting for potential confounders. Analyses were repeated on a subcohort (n=18 745; median‐follow‐up, 13.2 years) for whom HF cases were subclassified into preserved ejection fraction (526 events), reduced ejection fraction (291 events) or unknown (168 events). Most women were white (85%) with a mean age of 63. Compared with the highest quartile of magnesium intake, women in the lowest quartile had an increased risk of incident HF , with adjusted hazard ratios of 1.32 (95% CI , 1.02–1.71) for diet only ( P trend=0.03), 1.26 (95% CI , 1.03–1.56) for total intake, and 1.31 (95% CI , 1.02–1.67) for residual intake. Results did not significantly vary by race. Subcohort analyses showed low residual magnesium intake was associated with HF with reduced ejection fraction (hazard ratio, 1.81, lowest versus highest quartile; 95% CI , 1.08–3.05) but not HF with preserved ejection fraction. Conclusions Low magnesium intake in a multiracial cohort of postmenopausal women was associated with a higher risk of incident HF , especially HF with reduced ejection fraction.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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