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Get Free AccessBackground: A healthy lifestyle is associated with a lower risk of premature death. Metabolic pathways of a healthy lifestyle and their association with mortality remain to be understood. This study aimed to identify the metabolomic profile of a healthy lifestyle score and examine its prospective association with all-cause and cause-specific mortality, including death from cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer. Methods: The population included 12,146 participants from the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS), NHS II and Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS)(83% women, 97% white, aged 55±9y). Plasma metabolites were profiled using high-throughput liquid chromatography mass-spectrometry at baseline (NHS:1989-1990; NHSII:1996-1999; HPFS:1993-1995). The healthy lifestyle score was computed by summing the total number of healthy lifestyle factors participants adhered to from validated questionnaires at baseline: healthy diet (Alternative Healthy Eating Index, upper 40%), moderate alcohol intake (women: 5-15 g/d; men: 5-30 g/d), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (≥30min/d), never smoking and normal BMI (18.5-24.9kg/m 2 ). Deaths were ascertained with death certificates and medical records. The metabolite profile was identified using elastic net regressions with train test validation split (70-30%). Metabolic pathways were determined using Metabolite Set Enrichment Analysis (MSEA). Multivariable-adjusted Cox proportional hazards regressions were used to estimate hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals (HR[CI]) per unit of score of the healthy lifestyle metabolite profile with mortality risk. Results: The identified profile included 88 metabolites and correlated with the healthy lifestyle score (Pearson r=0.43-0.44; p<0.001). Triglyceride and diglyceride metabolite sets were inversely associated with the healthy lifestyle score, whereas cholesteryl ester and phosphatidylcholine plasmalogen sets were directly associated (p<0.001). Among individual lifestyle factors, the profile was most strongly correlated with normal BMI (r pb =0.43; p<0.001). Over 32y of follow-up, there were 3,851 deaths, including 749 deaths from CVD and 994 from cancer. Participants with a higher healthy lifestyle metabolite profile score had lower risk of all-cause (HR=0.79[0.73, 0.85]) and CVD mortality (HR=0.77[0.58, 0.95]), but not cancer (HR=0.91[0.77, 1.05]). Significant associations persisted after further adjustment for the healthy lifestyle score. Conclusions: In US adults, we identified a metabolite profile related to a healthy lifestyle largely reflecting lipid metabolism pathways. A higher metabolite score was associated with lower subsequent all-cause mortality risk, specifically from CVD. Findings provide novel insights into potential metabolic pathways underlying the association between a healthy lifestyle and lower premature mortality.
Anne‐Julie Tessier, Fenglei Wang, Liming Liang, Clemens Wittenbecher, Danielle E. Haslam, A. Heather Eliassen, Qi Sun, Deirdre K. Tobias, Jun Li, Oana A. Zeleznik, Alberto Ascherio, Meir J. Stampfer, Francine Grodstein, Kathryn M. Rexrode, Miguel Ángel Martínez‐González, Clary B. Clish, Jorge E. Chavarro, Frank B Hu, Marta Guasch‐Ferré (2023). Abstract P203: Healthy Lifestyle Plasma Metabolite Profile and Risk of Mortality in US Prospective Cohort Studies. , 147(Suppl_1), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circ.147.suppl_1.p203.
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Type
Article
Year
2023
Authors
19
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/circ.147.suppl_1.p203
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