TABLE 4
Epidemiologic studies and RCTs evaluating the effect of dietary patterns on telomere length11AHEI, Alternate Healthy Eating Index; BSDS, Baltic Sea Diet Score; DASH, Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; DII, Dietary Inflammatory Index; HBCS, Helsinki Birth Cohort Study; HEI, Healthy Eating Index; LTL, leukocyte telomere length; MedDiet, Mediterranean diet; mMED, modified Mediterranean diet; MESA, Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis; NES, National Examination Survey; NHS, Nurses’ Health Study; PBL, peripheral blood leukocytes; PLCOCST, Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial; PREDIMED-NAVARRA, Prevention with Mediterranean Diet, center of Navarra; RCT, randomized clinical trial; SB, Southern blotting; TL, telomere length; TRF, telomere restriction fragment; WELL, Wellbeing, Eating, and Exercise for a Long Life Study.
Reference Study design Population Method Dietary pattern/factor Results Nettleton et al. 2008 (56) Cross-sectional 840 white, black, and Hispanic US adults from the MESA, 45–84 y PBL/qPCR Food groups and dietary patterns derived from principal component analysis Processed meat intake was inversely associated with TLNeither the derived dietary pattern for fats and processed meat nor the dietary pattern for whole grains and fruit were significantly associated with telomere length after adjustment for demographic and lifestyle factors Sun et al. 2012 (73) Cross-sectional 5862 US women from the NHS aged 30–55 y PBL/qPCR AHEI No association between the AHEI score and TL was observed Boccardi et al. 2013 (74) Cross-sectional 217 elderly Italian subjects (102 females and 115 males) PBL/qPCR MedDiet High adherence to MedDiet showed longer leukocyte TL (P = 0.003) and higher telomerase activity (P = 0.013) compared with the group with lower adherence to MedDiet Crous-Bou et al. 2014 (58) Cross-sectional 4676 healthy American women within the NHS, 35–55 y PBL/qPCR MedDiet Greater adherence to the MedDiet was associated with longer telomeres after adjustment for potential confounders Gu et al. 2015 (60) Cross-sectional 1743 US multiethnic individuals (WHICAP), >65 y PBL/qPCR MedDiet MedDiet score was not associated with LTL in the overall study population after adjusting for age, sex, education, ethnicity, caloric intake, smoking, and physical and leisure activities. A significant association between MedDiet and LTL among non-Hispanic whites was reported García-Calzón et al. 2015 (75) Cross-sectional 520 Spanish individuals at high cardiovascular disease risk- PREDIMED-NAVARRA, 55– 80 y Buffy coat/qPCR DII Longer telomeres at baseline were found in participants who had a more anti-inflammatory diet (lowest DII score) García-Calzón et al. 2016 (76) Cross-sectional 520 females and males at high cardiovascular disease risk from the PREDIMED-NAVARRA center, 55–80 y Buffy coat/qPCR MedDiet A greater baseline adherence to a MedDiet pattern was associated with longer telomeres only in women in a cross-sectional setting Mazidi et al. 2017 (77) Cross-sectional 10,568 participants from NHANES, USA, 48% (n = 5020 were men). Mean age was 44.1 y PBL/qPCR Dietary patterns determined by principal component analysis and food components “a posteriori” Three food patterns together explaining 56.8% of the variance of the dietary nutrient consumption were identified. A food pattern, which was a representative of minerals and vitamins, increased across TL quarters and had a positive association with TL. Mean (adjusted for sex, age, and race) dietary intakes of carbohydrate, dietary fiber, total folate, vitamin B-6, magnesium, iron, copper, PUFAs 22:5, and vitamin C increased across TL quarters whereas total fat and caffeine decreased across TL quarters Shivappa et al. 2017 (78) Cross-sectional 7215 adults aged >19 y in the NHANES program, USA Whole blood/qPCR DII After multivariable adjustment, higher DII scores (i.e., relatively more proinflammatory) were associated with shorter LTL Leung et al. 2018 (79) Cross-sectional 4758 healthy US adults, NHANES, 20–65 y Whole blood/qPCR HEIAHEIMedDietDASH HEI-2010, AHEI-2010, MedDiet, and DASH scores were each positively associated with longer LTL De Meyer et al. 2018 (66) Cross-sectional 2509 Belgian males and females aged 35–55 y (Asklepios population) Whole blood/SB Dietary patterns and individual food components (DII) Upon adjustment for confounders, no significant associations could be identified between LTL and holistic dietary patterns, i.e., overall dietary score, dietary quality, dietary diversity, and dietary equilibrium. Additionally, the association between LTL and other general dietary characteristics, i.e., total daily energy, fiber intake, as well as the DII were evaluated, without significant results. A higher daily intake of deep-fried potato, sweets, and meat was associated with shorter telomeres in both sexes Karimi et al. 2018 (67) Cross-sectional 300 healthy Iranian men 25–40 y Whole blood/qPCR Healthy dietary pattern; Western dietary pattern; traditional dietary pattern “a posteriori” A positive relation was reported between the healthy dietary pattern (with consumption of whole grains, refined grains, dairy, and cereals) and traditional dietary pattern (with increased consumption of fruit, vegetables, and whole grains, fish and dairy products) with TLNegative association was identified with the Western pattern and TL Milte et al. 2018 (80) Cross-sectional 679 (females and males) participants at WELL study in Victoria, Australia, 57–68 y Whole blood/qPCR Dietary Guideline IndexRecommended food scoreMedDiet score After adjustment for age, sex, education, smoking, physical activity, and BMI, there were no significant associations between diet quality and relative telomere length Meinilä et al. 2019 (81) Cross-sectional 1046 females and males from the HBCS, Helsinki, Finland, 56–70 y Whole blood/qPCR BSDSModified MedDiet scoreDII BSDS, mMED, and DII were not associated with TL in the cross-sectional analysis in men or women Gong et al. 2018 (82) Cross-sectional 553 Chinese adults (50.8% men), 25–65 y Whole blood/TRF; SB Dietary pattern determined by principal component analysis “a posteriori” Vegetable-rich pattern characterized by higher intake of fruit, whole grains, various vegetable groups, dairy products, nuts, eggs, and tea, was positively related to TL in women Meinilä et al. 2019 (81) Prospective cohort 1046 females and males from the HBCS, Helsinky, Finland, 56–70 y Whole blood/qPCR BSDSModified MedDiet score, DII No association between mMED and LTL change was found in men. In women, mMED was associated with faster LTL shorteningAdherence to BSDS and DII did not associate with LTL change in men or women García-Calzón et al. 2015 (75) Prospective cohort 520 Spanish individuals at high cardiovascular disease risk- PREDIMED-NAVARRA, 55–80 y Buffy coat/qPCR DII A greater anti-inflammatory potential of the diet (i.e., a decrease in the DII) could significantly slow down the rate of telomere shortening Lee et al. 2015 (45) Prospective cohort 1958 Korean adults, 40–69 y, 10-y follow-up PBL/qPCR Dietary patterns determined by factor analysis “a posteriori” The first factor labeled “prudent dietary pattern” characterized by high intake of whole grains, seafood, legumes, vegetables, and seaweed was positively associated with leukocyte TL. In the analysis of particular food items, higher consumption of legumes, nuts, seaweed, fruit, and dairy products and lower consumption of red meat or processed meat and sweetened carbonated beverages were associated with longer leukocyte TL García-Calzón et al. 2016 (76) RCT 520 Spanish individuals at high cardiovascular disease risk from the PREDIMED-NAVARRA center, 55–80 y Buffy coat/qPCR Two MedDiets, 1 supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil and the other with mixed nuts compared with a low-fat diet No beneficial effect of the intervention with the MedDiet for the prevention of telomere shortening in comparison with a low-fat diet was observed after 5 y of intervention