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Healthy diet could reduce COPD risk

People with a higher score on the Alternate Healthy Eating Index 2010 are at a lower risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, according to Dr. Raphaëlle Varraso and associates.

Courtesy of National Cancer Institute

For both men and women, those in the highest quintile based on AHEI-2010 score were at the lowest risk of COPD, compared with those in the lowest quintile. For women, the third-highest quintile had the highest risk of COPD with a hazard ratio of 1.01, slightly higher than the baseline of 1. For men, the baseline quintile had the highest risk of COPD, but the second-highest quintile had the next-highest hazard ratio at 0.9.

Although efforts to prevent COPD should continue to focus on smoking cessation, these prospective findings support the importance of a healthy diet in multi-interventional programs to prevent COPD, the researchers concluded.

Read the full article at the BMJ (doi:10.1136/bmj.h286).

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People with a higher score on the Alternate Healthy Eating Index 2010 are at a lower risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, according to Dr. Raphaëlle Varraso and associates.

Courtesy of National Cancer Institute

For both men and women, those in the highest quintile based on AHEI-2010 score were at the lowest risk of COPD, compared with those in the lowest quintile. For women, the third-highest quintile had the highest risk of COPD with a hazard ratio of 1.01, slightly higher than the baseline of 1. For men, the baseline quintile had the highest risk of COPD, but the second-highest quintile had the next-highest hazard ratio at 0.9.

Although efforts to prevent COPD should continue to focus on smoking cessation, these prospective findings support the importance of a healthy diet in multi-interventional programs to prevent COPD, the researchers concluded.

Read the full article at the BMJ (doi:10.1136/bmj.h286).

People with a higher score on the Alternate Healthy Eating Index 2010 are at a lower risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, according to Dr. Raphaëlle Varraso and associates.

Courtesy of National Cancer Institute

For both men and women, those in the highest quintile based on AHEI-2010 score were at the lowest risk of COPD, compared with those in the lowest quintile. For women, the third-highest quintile had the highest risk of COPD with a hazard ratio of 1.01, slightly higher than the baseline of 1. For men, the baseline quintile had the highest risk of COPD, but the second-highest quintile had the next-highest hazard ratio at 0.9.

Although efforts to prevent COPD should continue to focus on smoking cessation, these prospective findings support the importance of a healthy diet in multi-interventional programs to prevent COPD, the researchers concluded.

Read the full article at the BMJ (doi:10.1136/bmj.h286).

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Healthy diet could reduce COPD risk
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Healthy diet could reduce COPD risk
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COPD, AHEI-2010, diet, healthy eating
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