Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To define the role of nutritional and dietary variables in determining atherogenic traits and morbidity and mortality due to coronary heart disease as observed in the Framingham Heart Study cohort and the Framingham Offspring Study cohort.
BACKGROUND:
A major component of the prevention and treatment of coronary heart disease is the
attenuation of its major underlying process, atherosclerosis, which brings about myocardial
ischemia. In exploring the determinants of atherosclerosis, a diet-heart hypothesis has
emerged. Simply stated, the hypothesis is that the excessive ingestion of dietary fat,
notably total fat, saturated fat and cholesterol and lowered intakes of other nutrients
including unsaturated fatty acids and possibly soluble fiber lead to the elevation of serum
LDL-cholesterol which causes atherosclerosis. Support of the diet-heart hypothesis is
available from epidemiologic, laboratory, and clinical research.
In spite of a broad range of data supporting the diet-heart hypothesis, the importance of
diet is often challenged. Cited in this controversy are population-based, cross-sectional
studies which have provided conflicting data. Several studies including an early report from
Framingham and the Tecumseh Study have failed on cross-sectional analysis to link dietary
variables to serum cholesterol, lipoproteins or coronary heart disease rates. The genetic
and possible dietary homogeneity in these populations and methodological weaknesses inherent
in singe serum cholesterol and dietary assessments have been posed as possible explanations
for these differing results.
Difficulties in confirming the diet-heart hypothesis across existing literature may arise
for several reasons: methodological problems inherent in estimating nutrient intake;
difficulties associated with characterizing a behavior as complex as food purchasing; wide
intraindividual variation in nutrient intake that make single day estimates of nutrient
intake difficult to interpret; dissimilarities among dietary data collection techniques;
varying lengths of followup for the observation of outcome variables in longitudinal
epidemiologic studies; differing methods of lipid measurement or the lack of lipoprotein
subfractionation. The Framingham data provide a unique opportunity to test the diet-heart
hypothesis both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, to develop models for studying diet
and heart disease relationships, and to establish the importance of dietary variables in
atherogenesis and the morbidity and mortality of heart disease.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The associations between nutritional variables and major atherogenic risk factors including
dyslipidemia, elevated blood pressure, impaired glucose tolerance, and overweight were
investigated cross-sectionally in the total Framingham Offspring Study cohort of 3,800. The
independent, quantitative effects of dietary factors on the prediction of cardiovascular
morbidity and mortality were explored longitudinally in two samples of the original
Framingham cohort at 20 and 30 years of follow-up. Six major steps were followed in each set
of analyses: dimension reduction using cluster and factor analysis; zero order independent
nutrition variable analyses; stepwise multiple regression of independent variables;
specification of overall regression models; stability and validity testing; the addition of
intervening variables using multiple regression techniques. Multivariate analyses of the
dependent variables were conducted to determine associations and interactions among these
variables.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in
the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.
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