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Healthy and Unhealthy Dietary Patterns and the Risk of Chronic Disease: An Umbrella Review of Meta-Analyses of Prospective Cohort Studies Publisher Pubmed



Jayedi A1, 2 ; Soltani S3 ; Abdolshahi A1 ; Shabbidar S2
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Food Safety Research Center (Salt), Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, 35681/33461, Iran
  2. 2. Department of Community Nutrition, School of Nutritional Science and Dietetics, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, 14155/6117, Iran
  3. 3. Nutrition and Food Security Research Center, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, 89169/78477, Iran

Source: British Journal of Nutrition Published:2020


Abstract

We aimed to fully review the association of empirical dietary patterns with the risk of non-communicable chronic diseases and to rate the quality of the evidence. Published meta-analyses of observational studies investigating the association of empirically derived dietary patterns with the risk of chronic diseases were identified by searching PubMed and Scopus till September 2019. Two independent reviewers extracted the information and rated the quality of the evidence by NutriGrade score. For each meta-analysis, cross-sectional and case-control studies were excluded and then summary relative risk was recalculated by using a random-effects model. Sixteen meta-analyses of prospective cohort studies, reporting eighteen SRR for healthy dietary patterns and sixteen SRR for unhealthy patterns obtained from 116 primary prospective cohort studies with 4·8 million participants, were included. There was moderate quality of evidence for the inverse association of healthy dietary patterns with the risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D), fracture and colorectal and breast cancers. There was also low-quality evidence for the inverse relation between healthy dietary patterns and the risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, depression, CHD and respiratory diseases. There was moderate quality of evidence for a positive association between unhealthy dietary patterns and the risk of T2D, fracture and the metabolic syndrome. Adopting a healthy dietary pattern may reduce the risk of T2D, CHD and premature death. More research is needed for outcomes for which the quality of the evidence was rated low, such as respiratory disease, mental illness and site-specific cancers. © 2020 Applied Physics Letters All rights reserved.
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