4.7 Article

Diet composition, nutrient substitutions and circulating fatty acids in relation to ectopic and visceral fat depots

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CLINICAL NUTRITION
卷 42, 期 10, 页码 1922-1931

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CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2023.08.013

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Diet; Ectopic fat; Fatty acids; Liver fat; Polyunsaturated fat; Saturated fat

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In this study conducted on participants of UK Biobank, it was found that intake of saturated and animal fat is positively associated with liver fat, visceral fat, and intermuscular fat, whereas biomarkers of polyunsaturated fat are inversely associated with these fat deposits. This suggests that the type of dietary fat is an important determinant of ectopic fat in the human body.
Background & aims: Short-term randomized trials have demonstrated that replacing saturated fat (SFA) with polyunsaturated fat (PUFA) causes a reduction or prevention of liver fat accumulation, but population-based studies on diet and body fat distribution are limited. We investigated cross-sectional associations between diet, circulating fatty acids and liver fat, visceral adipose tissue (VAT), intermuscular adipose tissue (IMAT) and other fat depots using different energy-adjustment models. Methods: Sex-stratified analyses of n = 9119 (for serum fatty acids) to 13 849 (for nutrients) participants in UK Biobank were conducted. Fat depots were assessed by MRI, circulating fatty acids by NMR spectroscopy and diet by repeated 24-h recalls. Liver fat, VAT and IMAT were primary outcomes; total adipose tissue (TAT) and abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (ASAT) were secondary outcomes. Three a priori defined models were constructed: the all-components model, standard model and leave-one-out model (main model including specified nutrient substitutions). Imiomics (MRI-derived) was used to confirm and visualize associations. Results: In women, substituting carbohydrates and free sugars with saturated fat (SFA) was positively associated with liver fat (b (95% CI) = 0.19 (0.02, 0.36) and b (95% CI) = 0.20 (0.05-0.35), respectively) and IMAT (b (95% CI) = 0.07 (0.00, 0.14) and b (95% CI) = 0.08 (0.02, 0.13), respectively), whereas substituting animal fat with plant fat was inversely associated with IMAT, ASAT and TAT. In the all-components and standard models, SFA and animal fat were positively associated with liver fat, IMAT and VAT whereas plant fat was inversely associated with IMAT in women. Few associations were observed in men. Circulating polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) were inversely associated with liver fat, IMAT and VAT in both men and women, whereas SFA and monounsaturated fatty acids were positively associated. Conclusions: Type of dietary fat may be an important determinant of ectopic fat in humans consuming their habitual diet. Plant fat and PUFA should be preferred over animal fat and SFA. This is corroborated by circulating fatty acids and overall consistent through different energy adjustment models. Twitter summary: In UK Biobank, intake of saturated-and animal fat were positively whereas biomarkers of polyunsaturated fat were inversely associated with liver-, visceral-and intermuscular fat. Type of dietary fat may be a determinant of ectopic fat, a risk factor for cardiometabolic disease.(c) 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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