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Associations of meat and fish consumption with conventional and radiomics cardiovascular magnetic resonance phenotypes in the UK Biobank

Associations of meat and fish consumption with conventional and radiomics cardiovascular magnetic resonance phenotypes in the UK Biobank
Associations of meat and fish consumption with conventional and radiomics cardiovascular magnetic resonance phenotypes in the UK Biobank

Background: Greater red and processed meat consumption has been linked to adverse cardiovascular outcomes. However, the impact of these exposures on cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) phenotypes has not been adequately studied. Objective: We describe novel associations of meat intake with cardiovascular phenotypes and investigate underlying mechanisms through consideration of a range of covariates. Design: We studied 19,408 UK Biobank participants with CMR data available. Average daily red and processed meat consumption was determined through food frequency questionnaires and expressed as a continuous variable. Oily fish was studied as a comparator, previously associated with favourable cardiac outcomes. We considered associations with conventional CMR indices (ventricular volumes, ejection fraction, stroke volume, left ventricular mass), novel CMR radiomics features (shape, first-order, texture), and arterial compliance measures (arterial stiffness index, aortic distensibility). We used multivariable linear regression to investigate relationships between meat intake and cardiovascular phenotypes, adjusting for confounders (age, sex, deprivation, educational level, smoking, alcohol intake, exercise) and potential covariates on the causal pathway (hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia, diabetes, body mass index). Results: Greater red and processed meat consumption was associated with an unhealthy pattern of biventricular remodelling, worse cardiac function, and poorer arterial compliance. In contrast, greater oily fish consumption was associated with a healthier cardiovascular phenotype and better arterial compliance. There was partial attenuation of associations between red meat and conventional CMR indices with addition of covariates potentially on the causal pathway, indicating a possible mechanistic role for these cardiometabolic morbidities. However, other associations were not altered with inclusion of these covariates, suggesting importance of alternative biological mechanisms underlying these relationships. Radiomics analysis provided deeper phenotyping, demonstrating association of the different dietary habits with distinct ventricular geometry and left ventricular myocardial texture patterns. Conclusions: Greater red and processed meat consumption is associated with impaired cardiovascular health, both in terms of markers of arterial disease and of cardiac structure and function. Cardiometabolic morbidities appeared to have a mechanistic role in the associations of red meat with ventricular phenotypes, but less so for other associations suggesting importance of alternative mechanism for these relationships.

Cardiovascular disease, Cardiovascular magnetic resonance, Diet, Disease prevention, Meat, Population health, Radiomics
Raisi-Estabragh, Zahra
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McCracken, Celeste
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Gkontra, Polyxeni
bf8e2eda-7fb2-4de0-b884-edd345e2712d
Jaggi, Akshay
3c44b68c-526b-43d4-932e-8dac54a91fa8
Ardissino, Maddalena
2cfd4d91-f405-4ed0-912b-313b0316c0fb
Cooper, Jackie
f78de577-4cac-496f-ad11-5f59dd305046
Biasiolli, Luca
b191bd84-2a3f-45da-9327-963c4ee4c6c9
Aung, Nay
709b152d-e704-4fdc-b066-7eafaa643a0b
Piechnik, Stefan K.
7de3d548-ca5a-40cb-a52b-c53d2dd2278a
Neubauer, Stefan
c8a34156-a4ed-4dfe-97cb-4f47627d927d
Munroe, Patricia B.
44d23746-20cd-4572-860e-7350424cc031
Lekadir, Karim
b8de558a-869c-4574-b0d3-005dc52c3106
Harvey, Nicholas
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Petersen, Steffen E.
04f2ce88-790d-48dc-baac-cbe0946dd928
Raisi-Estabragh, Zahra
43c85c5e-4574-476b-80d6-8fb1cdb3df0a
McCracken, Celeste
5d772e9e-3aaa-41da-a5ef-3943b1631fd9
Gkontra, Polyxeni
bf8e2eda-7fb2-4de0-b884-edd345e2712d
Jaggi, Akshay
3c44b68c-526b-43d4-932e-8dac54a91fa8
Ardissino, Maddalena
2cfd4d91-f405-4ed0-912b-313b0316c0fb
Cooper, Jackie
f78de577-4cac-496f-ad11-5f59dd305046
Biasiolli, Luca
b191bd84-2a3f-45da-9327-963c4ee4c6c9
Aung, Nay
709b152d-e704-4fdc-b066-7eafaa643a0b
Piechnik, Stefan K.
7de3d548-ca5a-40cb-a52b-c53d2dd2278a
Neubauer, Stefan
c8a34156-a4ed-4dfe-97cb-4f47627d927d
Munroe, Patricia B.
44d23746-20cd-4572-860e-7350424cc031
Lekadir, Karim
b8de558a-869c-4574-b0d3-005dc52c3106
Harvey, Nicholas
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Petersen, Steffen E.
04f2ce88-790d-48dc-baac-cbe0946dd928

Raisi-Estabragh, Zahra, McCracken, Celeste, Gkontra, Polyxeni, Jaggi, Akshay, Ardissino, Maddalena, Cooper, Jackie, Biasiolli, Luca, Aung, Nay, Piechnik, Stefan K., Neubauer, Stefan, Munroe, Patricia B., Lekadir, Karim, Harvey, Nicholas and Petersen, Steffen E. (2021) Associations of meat and fish consumption with conventional and radiomics cardiovascular magnetic resonance phenotypes in the UK Biobank. Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, 8, [667849]. (doi:10.3389/fcvm.2021.667849).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Greater red and processed meat consumption has been linked to adverse cardiovascular outcomes. However, the impact of these exposures on cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) phenotypes has not been adequately studied. Objective: We describe novel associations of meat intake with cardiovascular phenotypes and investigate underlying mechanisms through consideration of a range of covariates. Design: We studied 19,408 UK Biobank participants with CMR data available. Average daily red and processed meat consumption was determined through food frequency questionnaires and expressed as a continuous variable. Oily fish was studied as a comparator, previously associated with favourable cardiac outcomes. We considered associations with conventional CMR indices (ventricular volumes, ejection fraction, stroke volume, left ventricular mass), novel CMR radiomics features (shape, first-order, texture), and arterial compliance measures (arterial stiffness index, aortic distensibility). We used multivariable linear regression to investigate relationships between meat intake and cardiovascular phenotypes, adjusting for confounders (age, sex, deprivation, educational level, smoking, alcohol intake, exercise) and potential covariates on the causal pathway (hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia, diabetes, body mass index). Results: Greater red and processed meat consumption was associated with an unhealthy pattern of biventricular remodelling, worse cardiac function, and poorer arterial compliance. In contrast, greater oily fish consumption was associated with a healthier cardiovascular phenotype and better arterial compliance. There was partial attenuation of associations between red meat and conventional CMR indices with addition of covariates potentially on the causal pathway, indicating a possible mechanistic role for these cardiometabolic morbidities. However, other associations were not altered with inclusion of these covariates, suggesting importance of alternative biological mechanisms underlying these relationships. Radiomics analysis provided deeper phenotyping, demonstrating association of the different dietary habits with distinct ventricular geometry and left ventricular myocardial texture patterns. Conclusions: Greater red and processed meat consumption is associated with impaired cardiovascular health, both in terms of markers of arterial disease and of cardiac structure and function. Cardiometabolic morbidities appeared to have a mechanistic role in the associations of red meat with ventricular phenotypes, but less so for other associations suggesting importance of alternative mechanism for these relationships.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 April 2021
Published date: 5 May 2021
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease, Cardiovascular magnetic resonance, Diet, Disease prevention, Meat, Population health, Radiomics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452255
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452255
PURE UUID: b7d1cf9c-9b18-4de5-8d3a-8185a72cad1f
ORCID for Nicholas Harvey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8194-2512

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Date deposited: 02 Dec 2021 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:58

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Contributors

Author: Zahra Raisi-Estabragh
Author: Celeste McCracken
Author: Polyxeni Gkontra
Author: Akshay Jaggi
Author: Maddalena Ardissino
Author: Jackie Cooper
Author: Luca Biasiolli
Author: Nay Aung
Author: Stefan K. Piechnik
Author: Stefan Neubauer
Author: Patricia B. Munroe
Author: Karim Lekadir
Author: Nicholas Harvey ORCID iD
Author: Steffen E. Petersen

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