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Mediterranean diet in relation to body mass index and waist-to-hip ratio

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2008

Marta Rossi*
Affiliation:
Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche ‘Mario Negri’, Via La Masa 19, I-20156 Milan, Italy
Eva Negri
Affiliation:
Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche ‘Mario Negri’, Via La Masa 19, I-20156 Milan, Italy
Cristina Bosetti
Affiliation:
Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche ‘Mario Negri’, Via La Masa 19, I-20156 Milan, Italy
Luigino Dal Maso
Affiliation:
Unità di Epidemiologia e Biostatistica, Centro di Riferimento Oncologico, Aviano, Pordenone, Italy
Renato Talamini
Affiliation:
Unità di Epidemiologia e Biostatistica, Centro di Riferimento Oncologico, Aviano, Pordenone, Italy
Attilio Giacosa
Affiliation:
Policlinico di Monza, Monza, Italy
Maurizio Montella
Affiliation:
Istituto Tumori ‘Fondazione Pascale’ Cappella dei Cangiani, Naples, Italy
Silvia Franceschi
Affiliation:
International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France
Carlo La Vecchia
Affiliation:
Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche ‘Mario Negri’, Via La Masa 19, I-20156 Milan, Italy Istituto di Statistica Medica e Biometria, ‘G. A. Maccacaro’ University of Milan, Milan, Italy
*
Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
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Abstract

Objective

The Mediterranean diet is rich in fat and starch, and hence may be related to overweight. We therefore investigated the relationship between adherence to a Mediterranean diet and body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR).

Design and setting

Data were obtained from the control group of a network of case–control studies on cancer conducted in major teaching and general hospitals in four Italian areas between 1991 and 2002. An interviewer-administered validated 78-item food-frequency questionnaire was used to obtain information on the subjects’ habitual diet. Information on socio-economic factors, lifestyle habits and anthropometric measures was also collected. A Mediterranean diet score (MDS) was derived on the basis of eight characteristics of the Mediterranean diet.

Subjects

Subjects were 6619 patients (3090 men, 3529 women) admitted to hospital for a wide spectrum of acute, non-neoplastic conditions, unrelated to known risk factors for cancer and long-term modifications of diet.

Results

In multiple linear regression models adjusted for age, study centre, education, tobacco smoking, occupational physical activity and total energy intake, the MDS was not related to BMI (β = 0.05 for men and −0.04 for women) or WHR (β = 0.000 and 0.001, respectively) in both sexes.

Conclusions

Adherence to the major characteristics of the Mediterranean diet is unrelated to BMI and WHR, confirming previous data from Greece and Spain.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2007

The Mediterranean diet has long been related to a reduced incidence of coronary heart diseaseReference Keys1. More recently, adherence to a Mediterranean diet has also been associated with increased survival in the elderlyReference Trichopoulou, Kouris-Blazos, Wahlqvist, Gnardellis, Lagiou and Polychronopoulos2, Reference Lasheras, Fernandez and Patterson3 and in the general populationReference Trichopoulou, Costacou, Bamia and Trichopoulos4, and a reduced risk of cancers of the upper digestive and respiratory tractsReference Bosetti, Gallus, Trichopoulou, Talamini, Franceschi and Negri5.

Overweight is a major problem in Mediterranean countries, although its prevalence has been stable at about one-third of the population in Italy over the last 15 yearsReference Gallus, Colombo, Scarpino, Zuccaro, Negri and Apolone6. It has been suggested that the Mediterranean diet, rich in fat (particularly from olive oil) and starchReference Ferro-Luzzi, James and Kafatos7, may be related to overweight. However, in a longitudinal study conducted in Spain, weight increments were smaller, if anything, in participants with higher adherence to an ‘a priori’ defined Mediterranean dietary patternReference Sanchez-Villegas, Bes-Rastrollo, Martinez-Gonzalez and Serra-Majem8. Moreover, in a population sample of adults from Greece, adherence to a Mediterranean diet was unrelated to body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR)Reference Trichopoulou, Naska, Orfanos and Trichopoulos9, whereas in another study from Spain a higher BMI and risk of being obese were associated with a lower adherence to a traditional Mediterranean diet in both gendersReference Schroder, Marrugat, Vila, Covas and Elosua10.

To provide further information on the issue, we analysed the associations between a Mediterranean diet score (MDS) and BMI and WHR using data from Italy.

Materials and methods

Subjects were 6619 adults (3090 men, 3529 women; median age 58 years) from the control group of a network of case–control studies conducted in four areas of northern, central and southern ItalyReference Gallus, Talamini, Giacosa, Montella, Ramazzotti and Franceschi11. These subjects were admitted to major teaching and general hospitals of the study areas for a wide spectrum of acute, non-neoplastic conditions, unrelated to known risk factors for cancer and long-term modifications of diet.

An interviewer-administered validated 78-item food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ) was used to obtain information on the subjects’ habitual dietReference Franceschi, Barbone, Negri, Decarli, Ferraroni and Filiberti12, Reference Decarli, Franceschi, Ferraroni, Gnagnarella, Parpinel and La Vecchia13. We collected information also on education and other socio-economic factors, physical activity, tobacco smoking, alcohol drinking and coffee consumption. Self-reported information on height and weight at different ages was collected. Waist and hip circumference were measured by interviewers on 5234 subjects.

The MDS was defined a priori on the basis of eight characteristics of the traditional Mediterranean dietReference Trichopoulou, Kouris-Blazos, Wahlqvist, Gnardellis, Lagiou and Polychronopoulos2, Reference Bosetti, Gallus, Trichopoulou, Talamini, Franceschi and Negri5, Reference Trichopoulou, Naska, Orfanos and Trichopoulos9; i.e. high monounsaturated/saturated fat ratio, moderate alcohol intake, high consumption of cereals, legumes, fruit and vegetables, and low consumption of meat and meat products, and milk and dairy products. The cut-off points for the items considered were set to the sex-specific median values. A point was attributed in the presence of each characteristic and none otherwise. For alcohol, a value of 1 was attributed to moderate drinkers (i.e. for men with consumption below 28 drinks per week and for women with consumption below 14 drinks per week), while a value of 0 was attributed to those with consumption above these values as well as to non-drinkers. The MDS was then calculated by summing up the points for each of the eight items. Thus, the score ranged between 0 (lowest adherence) and 8 (highest adherence).

Data analysis

Multiple linear regression analysis was applied to assess the association of MDS with BMI and WHR separately for men and women. The MDS was entered in the models as a continuous variable (with an increment equal to 1). Besides MDS, models with both BMI and WHR as dependent variable included terms for age, study centre, education, tobacco smoking, occupational physical activity and total energy intake.

Results

Table 1 gives the mean weekly intake of the food items contributing to the MDS according to MDS quintiles and sex. By definition, consumption of vegetables, legumes, fruit, cereals, and monounsaturated/saturated fat ratio increased, while dairy products, meat and alcohol consumption decreased, with increasing levels of the score.

Table 1 Mean weekly intakeFootnote * for food groups that are components of the Mediterranean diet score (MDS) by level of the score and sex among 3090 men and 3529 women. Italy, 1991–2002

* Portions or drinks per week.

The sum does not add up to the total because of some missing values.

Monounsaturated/saturated fat ratio.

Table 2 shows the coefficients (β) of the MDS, and of other factors included in the linear regression models, on BMI and WHR. In either sex, there was no relationship between the MDS and BMI (β = 0.05 for men and −0.04 for women) or WHR (β = 0.000 and 0.001, respectively). BMI was inversely related to education and smoking, and directly related to physical activity in both sexes. WHR was inversely related to education in women, but no consistent relationship emerged with other variables. Exclusion of energy intake from the model did not materially modify the estimates, nor did the inclusion of a term for BMI in the WHR models.

Table 2 Coefficients (β) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), derived by multiple regression analysis, of body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) according to Mediterranean diet score (MDS), age, education, tobacco smoking and occupational physical activity. Italy, 1991–2002

*The sum does not add up to the total because of some missing values.

†Mean±standard deviation.

‡Estimates from multiple linear regression models adjusted for age, study centre, education, tobacco smoking, occupational physical activity, total energy intake and MDS.

§Estimated for an increment equal to 1.

Discussion

Available information on the possible influence of the Mediterranean diet on weight, weight gain, BMI and other anthropometric measures is limited. In a prospective study of 6319 Spanish participants in the SUN (Seguimiento University of Navarra) cohortReference Sanchez-Villegas, Bes-Rastrollo, Martinez-Gonzalez and Serra-Majem8, subjects in the lowest quartile of adherence to a Mediterranean diet pattern showed a higher weight gain (+0.73 kg) than those in the highest quartile (+0.45 kg). The association, however, was no longer significant after allowing for relevant confounding factors. In a Greek study of 23 597 adult men and womenReference Trichopoulou, Naska, Orfanos and Trichopoulos9, a 2-point increase in the score was found to correspond to increases of only a few grams in weight for both sexes. However, after allowance for total energy intake, adherence to the Mediterranean diet was essentially unrelated to BMI and weakly related to WHR in women only. In a Spanish study of 1547 men and 1615 womenReference Schroder, Marrugat, Vila, Covas and Elosua10, adherence to a traditional Mediterranean diet pattern was inversely related to BMI and obesity, with a multivariate relative risk of 0.61 for being obese in the top tertile of this score in both sexes.

The present large sample of men and women coming from different areas of Italy, and including information from a validated FFQReference Franceschi, Barbone, Negri, Decarli, Ferraroni and Filiberti12, Reference Decarli, Franceschi, Ferraroni, Gnagnarella, Parpinel and La Vecchia13, therefore provides additional evidence that, after allowance for energy intake, socio-economic status and major lifestyle habits, adherence to the major characteristics of a Mediterranean diet is unrelated to BMI and WHR, confirming previous data from GreeceReference Trichopoulou, Naska, Orfanos and Trichopoulos9 and SpainReference Sanchez-Villegas, Bes-Rastrollo, Martinez-Gonzalez and Serra-Majem8, Reference Schroder, Marrugat, Vila, Covas and Elosua10.

More than on a single dietary aspect, the interest of this study is related to the contribution of various food items, previously related to favourable health outcomes and overall survival, in a simple summary scoreReference Trichopoulou, Kouris-Blazos, Wahlqvist, Gnardellis, Lagiou and Polychronopoulos2, Reference Bosetti, Gallus, Trichopoulou, Talamini, Franceschi and Negri5, Reference Trichopoulou, Naska, Orfanos and Trichopoulos9.

This study has the limitation of being cross-sectional, thus limiting inference on the time sequence of the associations, but also has several strengths, including its large sample size, the validated FFQ, and the variable composition of the Mediterranean diet in northern, central and southern Italy. We also excluded subjects with chronic conditions leading to long-term modifications of diet and consequently anthropometric measures.

Height and weight were self-reported, and it is known that subjects tend to underestimate weight and overestimate heightReference Tavani, Negri and La Vecchia14Reference Spencer, Appleby, Davey and Key16. However, any such possible misreporting is unlikely be correlated to the indicators of Mediterranean diet considered in the present analysis. Waist and hip circumferences, on the other hand, were measured by trained interviewers.

In a similar study population, alcohol drinkers had a mean BMI similar to non-drinkers, but heavy drinkers were lighterReference Villanueva17. Bread, vegetable and fruit consumption were non-significantly related to BMI. The main determinants of BMI were social class and education (inversely related) and smoking (inversely related for intermediate only)Reference Villanueva17. These factors were allowed for in our analyses.

Acknowledgements

Sources of funding: The work was conducted with the contribution of the Italian Association for Cancer Research and the Italian League Against Cancer. The work in this paper was undertaken while C.L.V. was a Senior Fellow at the International Agency for Research on Cancer.

Conflict of interest declaration: The authors have no conflict of interest.

Authorship responsibilities: M.R. conducted the statistical analyses and wrote the manuscript; E.N. supervised the statistical analyses and revised the manuscript; C.B. revised the manuscript; L.D.M., R.T., A.G., M.M. and S.F. participated in the data collection and revised the analyses; C.L.V. contributed to study design, funding and writing the manuscript.

Acknowledgements: The authors thank Mrs I Garimoldi and Mrs P Bonifacino for editorial assistance.

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Figure 0

Table 1 Mean weekly intake* for food groups that are components of the Mediterranean diet score (MDS) by level of the score and sex among 3090 men and 3529 women. Italy, 1991–2002

Figure 1

Table 2 Coefficients (β) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), derived by multiple regression analysis, of body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) according to Mediterranean diet score (MDS), age, education, tobacco smoking and occupational physical activity. Italy, 1991–2002