Dietary Meat, Trimethylamine N-Oxide-Related Metabolites, and Incident Cardiovascular Disease Among Older Adults: The Cardiovascular Health Study

Author:

Wang Meng1ORCID,Wang Zeneng23ORCID,Lee Yujin4ORCID,Lai Heidi T.M.5,de Oliveira Otto Marcia C.6,Lemaitre Rozenn N.7,Fretts Amanda78,Sotoodehnia Nona7,Budoff Matthew9ORCID,DiDonato Joseph A.23,McKnight Barbara710,Tang W.H. Wilson2311ORCID,Psaty Bruce M.7812ORCID,Siscovick David S.13ORCID,Hazen Stanley L.2311ORCID,Mozaffarian Dariush1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, Boston, MA (M.W., D.M.).

2. Department of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Sciences (Z.W., J.A.D., W.H.W.T., S.L.H.), Cleveland Clinic, OH.

3. Center for Microbiome and Human Health (Z.W., J.A.D., W.H.W.T., S.L.H.), Cleveland Clinic, OH.

4. Department of Food and Nutrition, Myongji University, Yongin, South Korea (Y.L.).

5. Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Imperial College London, United Kingdom (H.T.M.L.).

6. Division of Epidemiology, Human Genetics and Environmental Sciences, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) School of Public Health, Houston, TX (M.C.d.O.O.).

7. Cardiovascular Health Research Unit, Department of Medicine (R.N.L., A.F., N.S., B.M., B.M.P.), University of Washington, Seattle.

8. Department of Epidemiology (A.F., B.M.P.), University of Washington, Seattle.

9. Lundquist Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA (M.B.).

10. Department of Biostatistics (B.M.), University of Washington, Seattle.

11. Lerner Research Institute and Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Heart and Vascular Institute (W.H.W.T., S.L.H.), Cleveland Clinic, OH.

12. Department of Health Systems and Population Health (B.M.P.), University of Washington, Seattle.

13. The New York Academy of Medicine, New York (D.S.S.).

Abstract

Background:Effects of animal source foods (ASF) on atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and underlying mechanisms remain controversial. We investigated prospective associations of different ASF with incident ASCVD and potential mediation by gut microbiota-generated trimethylamine N-oxide, its L-carnitine-derived intermediates γ-butyrobetaine and crotonobetaine, and traditional ASCVD risk pathways.Methods:Among 3931 participants from a community-based US cohort aged 65+ years, ASF intakes and trimethylamine N-oxide-related metabolites were measured serially over time. Incident ASCVD (myocardial infarction, fatal coronary heart disease, stroke, other atherosclerotic death) was adjudicated over 12.5 years median follow-up. Cox proportional hazards models with time-varying exposures and covariates examined ASF-ASCVD associations; and additive hazard models, mediation proportions by different risk pathways.Results:After multivariable-adjustment, higher intakes of unprocessed red meat, total meat, and total ASF associated with higher ASCVD risk, with hazard ratios (95% CI) per interquintile range of 1.15 (1.01–1.30), 1.22 (1.07–1.39), and 1.18 (1.03–1.34), respectively. Trimethylamine N-oxide-related metabolites together significantly mediated these associations, with mediation proportions (95% CI) of 10.6% (1.0–114.5), 7.8% (1.0–32.7), and 9.2% (2.2–44.5), respectively. Processed meat intake associated with a nonsignificant trend toward higher ASCVD (1.11 [0.98–1.25]); intakes of fish, poultry, and eggs were not significantly associated. Among other risk pathways, blood glucose, insulin, and C-reactive protein, but not blood pressure or blood cholesterol, each significantly mediated the total meat-ASCVD association.Conclusions:In this large, community-based cohort, higher meat intake associated with incident ASCVD, partly mediated by microbiota-derived metabolites of L-carnitine, abundant in red meat. These novel findings support biochemical links between dietary meat, gut microbiome pathways, and ASCVD.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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