4.6 Article

Phytosterol plasma concentrations and coronary heart disease in the prospective Spanish EPIC cohort

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 3, Pages 618-624

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.P000471

Keywords

plant sterols; sitosterol; campesterol; lathosterol; cholesterol; European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; nested case-control study; cardiometabolic risk; apolipoprotein E

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Health FIS [PI04/0104, PI04/1822, PI04/2342, PI04/2188, PI04/1644, PI06/0365]
  2. Fundacion Espanola de Arteriosclerosis 2006
  3. Fundacio Privada Catalana de Nutricio i Lipids

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Phytosterol intake with natural foods, a measure of healthy dietary choices, increases plasma levels, but increased plasma phytosterols are believed to be a coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factor. To address this paradox, we evaluated baseline risk factors, phytosterol intake, and plasma noncholesterol sterol levels in participants of a case control study nested within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) Spanish cohort who developed CHD (n = 299) and matched controls (n = 584) who remained free of CHD after a 10 year follow-up. Sitosterol-to-cholesterol ratios increased across tertiles of phytosterol intake (P = 0.026). HDL-cholesterol level increased, and adiposity measures, cholesterol/HDL ratios, and levels of glucose, triglycerides, and lathosterol, a cholesterol synthesis marker, decreased across plasma sitosterol tertiles (P < 0.02; all). Compared with controls, cases had nonsignificantly lower median levels of phytosterol intake and plasma sitosterol. The multivariable-adjusted odds ratio for CHD across the lowest to highest plasma sitosterol tertile was 0.59 (95% confidence interval, 0.36-0.97). Associations were weaker for plasma campesterol. The apolipoprotein E genotype was unrelated to CHD risk or plasma phytosterols. The data suggest that plasma sitosterol levels are associated with a lower CHD risk while being markers of a lower cardiometabolic risk in the EPIC-Spain cohort, a population with a high phytosterol intake.-Escurriol, V., M. Cofan, C. Moreno-Iribas, N. Larranaga, C. Martinez, C. Navarro, L. Rodriguez, C. A. Gonzalez, D. Corella, and E. Ros. Phytosterol plasma concentrations and coronary heart disease in the prospective Spanish EPIC cohort. J. Lipid Res. 2010. 51: 618-624.

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