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Emily Sonestedt

Emily Sonestedt

Associate senior lecturer

Emily Sonestedt

Diet quality scores and prediction of all-cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality in a pan-european cohort study

Author

  • Camille Lassale
  • Marc J. Gunter
  • Dora Romaguera
  • Linda M. Peelen
  • Yvonne T. Van Der Schouw
  • Joline W J Beulens
  • Heinz Freisling
  • David C. Muller
  • Pietro Ferrari
  • Inge Huybrechts
  • Guy Fagherazzi
  • Marie Christine Boutron-Ruault
  • Aurélie Affret
  • Kim Overvad
  • Christina C. Dahm
  • Anja Olsen
  • Nina Roswall
  • Konstantinos K. Tsilidis
  • Verena A. Katzke
  • Tilman Kühn
  • Brian Buijsse
  • José Ramón Quirós
  • Emilio Sánchez-Cantalejo
  • Nerea Etxezarreta
  • José María Huerta
  • Aurelio Barricarte
  • Catalina Bonet
  • Kay Tee Khaw
  • Timothy J. Key
  • Antonia Trichopoulou
  • Christina Bamia
  • Pagona Lagiou
  • Domenico Palli
  • Claudia Agnoli
  • Rosario Tumino
  • Francesca Fasanelli
  • Salvatore Panico
  • H. Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita
  • Jolanda M A Boer
  • Emily Sonestedt
  • Lena Maria Nilsson
  • Frida Renström
  • Elisabete Weiderpass
  • Guri Skeie
  • Eiliv Lund
  • Karel G M Moons
  • Elio Riboli
  • Ioanna Tzoulaki

Summary, in English

Scores of overall diet quality have received increasing attention in relation to disease aetiology; however, their value in risk prediction has been little examined. The objective was to assess and compare the association and predictive performance of 10 diet quality scores on 10-year risk of all-cause, CVD and cancer mortality in 451,256 healthy participants to the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition, followed-up for a median of 12.8y. All dietary scores studied showed significant inverse associations with all outcomes. The range of HRs (95% CI) in the top vs. lowest quartile of dietary scores in a composite model including non-invasive factors (age, sex, smoking, body mass index, education, physical activity and study centre) was 0.75 (0.72-0.79) to 0.88 (0.84-0.92) for all-cause, 0.76 (0.69-0.83) to 0.84 (0.76-0.92) for CVD and 0.78 (0.73-0.83) to 0.91 (0.85-0.97) for cancer mortality. Models with dietary scores alone showed low discrimination, but composite models also including age, sex and other non-invasive factors showed good discrimination and calibration, which varied little between different diet scores examined. Mean C-statistic of full models was 0.73, 0.80 and 0.71 for all-cause, CVD and cancer mortality. Dietary scores have poor predictive performance for 10-year mortality risk when used in isolation but display good predictive ability in combination with other non-invasive common risk factors.

Department/s

  • Nutrition Epidemiology
  • Genetic and Molecular Epidemiology
  • EXODIAB: Excellence of Diabetes Research in Sweden
  • EpiHealth: Epidemiology for Health

Publishing year

2016-07-01

Language

English

Publication/Series

PLoS ONE

Volume

11

Issue

7

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Topic

  • Clinical Medicine

Status

Published

Research group

  • Nutrition Epidemiology
  • Genetic and Molecular Epidemiology

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1932-6203