Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Internal Medicine, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Background
Whether genetic background and/or dietary behaviors influence weight gain in middle-aged subjects is debated.
Objective
To assess whether genetic background and/or dietary behaviors are associated with changes in obesity markers (BMI, weight, and waist and hip circumferences) in a Swiss population-based cohort.
Methods
Cross-sectional and prospective (follow-up of 5.3 y) study. Two obesity genetic risk scores (GRS) based on 31 or 68 single nucleotide polymorphisms were used. Dietary intake was assessed using a semiquantitative FFQ. Three dietary patterns “Meat & fries” (unhealthy), “Fruits & vegetables” (healthy), and “Fatty & sugary” (unhealthy), and 3 dietary scores (2 Mediterranean and the Alternative Healthy Eating Index [AHEI]) were computed.
Results
On cross-sectional analysis (N = 3033, 53.2% females, 58.4 ± 10.6 y), obesity markers were positively associated with unhealthy dietary patterns and GRS, and negatively associated with healthy dietary scores and patterns. On prospective analysis (N = 2542, 54.7% females, age at baseline 58.0 ± 10.4 y), the AHEI and the “Fruits & vegetables” pattern were negatively associated with waist circumference gain: multivariate-adjusted average ± SE 0.96 ± 0.25 compared with 0.11 ± 0.26 cm (P for trend 0.044), and 1.14 ± 0.26 compared with –0.05 ± 0.26 cm (P for trend 0.042) for the first and fourth quartiles of the AHEI and the “Fruits & vegetables” pattern, respectively. Similar inverse associations were obtained for changes in waist >5 cm: multivariate-adjusted OR (95% CI): 0.65 (0.50, 0.85) and 0.67 (0.51, 0.89) for the fourth versus the first quartile of the AHEI and the “Fruits & vegetables” dietary pattern, respectively. No associations were found between GRS and changes in obesity markers, and no significant gene-diet interactions were found.
Conclusion
Dietary intake, not GRS, are associated with waist circumference in middle-aged subjects living in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Funder
GlaxoSmithKline
Faculty of Biology and Medicine of Lausanne
Swiss National Science Foundation
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
5 articles.
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