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Associations between fruit and vegetable intakes and incident depression in middle-aged and older adults from 10 diverse international longitudinal cohorts

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 15:03 authored by Annabel P Matison, Victoria M Flood, Ben CP Lam, Darren M Lipnicki, Katherine L Tucker, Pierre Marie Preux, Maëlenn Guerchet, Eleonora d'Orsi, Anna Quialheiro, Cassiano R Rech, Ingmar Skoog, Jenna Najar, Therese Rydberg Sterner, Nikolaos Scarmeas, Mary H Kosmidis, Mary Yannakoulia, Oye Gureje, Akin Ojagbemi, Toyin Bello, Suzana Shahar, Nik NINM Fakhruddin, Nurul FM Rivan, Kaarin J Anstey, Nicolas Cherbuin, Moyra E Mortby, Roger Ho, Henry Brodaty, Perminder S Sachdev, Simone Reppermund
Background: Emerging observational evidence supports a role for higher fruit and vegetable intake in protecting against the development of depression. However, there is a scarcity of research in older adults or in low- to middle-income countries (LMICs). Methods: Participants were 7801 community-based adults (mean age 68.6 ± 8.0 years, 55.8 % female) without depression, from 10 diverse cohorts, including four cohorts from LMICs. Fruit and vegetable intake was self-reported via comprehensive food frequency questionnaire, short food questionnaire or diet history. Depressive symptoms were assessed using validated measures, and depression defined applying validated cut-offs. The associations between baseline fruit and vegetable intakes and incident depression over a follow-up period of three to nine years were examined using Cox regression. Analyses were performed by cohort with results meta-analysed. Results: There were 1630 cases of incident depression (21 % of participants) over 40,258 person-years of follow-up. Higher intake of fruit was associated with a lower risk of incident depression (HR 0.87, 95%CI [0.77, 0.99], I2 = 4 %). No association was found between vegetable intake and incident depression (HR 0.93, 95%CI [0.84, 1.04], I2 = 0 %). Limitations: Diverse measures used across the different cohorts and the modest sample size of our study compared with prior studies may have prevented an association being detected for vegetable intake. Conclusions: Our study supports a role for fruit, but not vegetable intake in protecting against depression. Research investigating different types of fruits and vegetables using standardised measures in larger cohorts of older adults from low- and middle-income countries is warranted.

Funding

AXA Research Fund (U48 DP005031-01)

History

Journal title

Journal of Affective Disorders

Volume

359

Pagination

373-381

Language

English

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