Long-term dietary adherence and changes in dietary intake in coronary patients after intervention with a Mediterranean diet or a low-fat diet: the CORDIOPREV randomized trial
Purpose Adherence to a healthy dietary pattern positively influences clinical outcomes in cardiovascular prevention, but long-term adherence is difficult to maintain. We evaluated 5-year changes in dietary habits, adherence achieved, and its maintenance in a cohort of coronary patients from the CORD...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of nutrition 2020-08, Vol.59 (5), p.2099-2110 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Adherence to a healthy dietary pattern positively influences clinical outcomes in cardiovascular prevention, but long-term adherence is difficult to maintain. We evaluated 5-year changes in dietary habits, adherence achieved, and its maintenance in a cohort of coronary patients from the CORDIOPREV study.
Methods
1002 coronary patients were randomized to a Mediterranean diet (
n
= 502) or a low-fat diet (
n
= 500) and received individual-group-telephone visits and personalized dietary advice. A validated food-frequency questionnaire, a 14-point Mediterranean diet adherence screener, and a 9-point low-fat diet adherence score were used. Dietary adherence was categorized into
Low
,
Medium
, and
High Adherence
. Changes in nutrient intake, food consumption, and adherence were analyzed on a yearly basis. The maintenance of long-term dietary adherence was evaluated using data after the first year and fifth year.
Results
From baseline to 5 years, significant increases were observed in overall dietary adherence (Mediterranean diet from 8.9 to 11.4; low-fat diet from 3.9 to 7.1) and in the percentage of patients considered
High Adherence
(Mediterranean diet from 41 to 89%; low-fat diet from 4 to 67%). When we evaluated the maintenance of adherence, patients considered
Low
and
Medium Adherence
at 1 year increased their adherence at the 5 years with both diets and patients considered
High Adherence
maintained their adherence with a Mediterranean diet, but decreased their adherence with a low-fat diet.
Conclusions
A comprehensive dietary intervention results in an overall long-term improvement and maintenance of adherence to the Mediterranean and low-fat diets. In our population, the Mediterranean diet group achieved a high level of adherence in the short term which was maintained in the long term. |
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ISSN: | 1436-6207 1436-6215 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00394-019-02059-5 |