4.7 Article

Consumption of food fried in olive oil and unhealthy aging in a Mediterranean country

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 40, Issue 1, Pages 277-285

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2020.05.018

Keywords

Fried food; Olive oil; Unhealthy aging; Cohort study; Older adults

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III, State Secretary of R+D+I
  2. FEDER/FSE (FIS) [16/609, 16/1512, 18/287, 19/319]
  3. JPI-A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life, State Secretary of R+D+I (Salamander Project) [PCIN-2016-145]
  4. Catedra de Epidemiologia y Control del Riesgo Cardiovascular at UAM [820024]

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The study found that increased consumption of fried food in a Mediterranean country was associated with delayed unhealthy aging. Olive oil and fried protein-rich foods were the main drivers of this association.
Background & aims: Fried food has usually shown neutral or detrimental effects on many chronic diseases, possibly depending on the type of food fried and the frying oil, but its relationship with unhealthy aging is unknown. We examined how changes in fried food consumption over a 3-year period were linked to unhealthy aging over 3 and 6 years. Methods: Prospective cohort study in Spain with 2043 individuals aged >= 60 years, recruited in 2008-2010 and followed-up to 2012 and 2015. Fried food consumption was ascertained with a validated diet history, and unhealthy aging was measured with a 52-item health deficit accumulation index. Results: Compared with participants who reduced fried food consumption, those who increased it showed less deficit accumulation over 3 years (multivariable beta [95% confidence interval]: -1.45 [-2.30,-0.61]), but not over 6 years of follow-up. More 3-year deficit accumulation was observed when replacing 100 g/day of fried food with an equal amount of non-fried food (1.48 [0.59, 2.37]); corresponding values in substitution analyses were 2.03 [1.03, 3.03] for fried protein-rich food, 10.76 [5.20, 16.33] for fried eggs, and 2.06 [0.68, 3.43] for fried fish. Also, increased olive oil intake was significantly associated with less 3-year deficit accumulation (total olive oil:-1.14 [-2.07,-0.21], and olive oil with non-fried food:-0.99 [-1.89,-0.08]). Conclusions: In a Mediterranean country, where olive oil is the most common frying medium, increased fried food consumption was associated with delayed unhealthy aging over 3 years of follow-up; consumption of olive oil and fried protein-rich food (especially eggs and fish) were its main drivers. However, these associations did not generally remain after (C) years. 0 2020 Elsevier Ltd and European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. All rights reserved.

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