Diet quality, dietary inflammatory index and body mass index as predictors of response to adjunctive N-acetylcysteine and mitochondrial agents in adults with bipolar disorder: A sub-study of a randomised placebo-controlled trial

M. Ashton, O. Dean, W. Marx, M. Mohebbi, M. Berk, G. Malhi, C. Ng, S. Cotton, S. Dodd, J. Sarris, M. Hopwood, K. Faye-Chauhan, Yesul Kim, S. Dash, F. Jacka, N. Shivappa, J. Hébert, A. Turner
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Aims: We aimed to explore the relationships between diet quality, dietary inflammatory potential or body mass index and outcomes of a clinical trial of nutraceutical treatment for bipolar depression. Methods: This is a sub-study of a randomised controlled trial of participants with bipolar depression who provided dietary intake data (n = 133). Participants received 16 weeks adjunctive treatment of either placebo or N-acetylcysteine-alone or a combination of mitochondrial-enhancing nutraceuticals including N-acetylcysteine (combination treatment). Participants were followed up 4 weeks post-treatment discontinuation (Week 20). Diet was assessed by the Cancer Council Victoria Dietary Questionnaire for Epidemiological Studies, Version 2, converted into an Australian Recommended Food Score to measure diet quality, and energy-adjusted dietary inflammatory index score to measure inflammatory potential of diet. Body mass index was also measured. Generalised estimating equation models were used to assess whether diet quality, energy-adjusted dietary inflammatory index score and/or body mass index were predictors of response to significant outcomes of the primary trial: depression symptoms, clinician-rated improvement and functioning measures. Results: In participants taking combination treatment compared to placebo, change in depression scores was not predicted by Australian Recommended Food Score, dietary inflammatory index or body mass index scores. However, participants with better diet quality (Australian Recommended Food Score) reported reduced general depression and bipolar depression symptoms (p = 0.01 and p = 0.03, respectively) and greater clinician-rated improvement (p = 0.02) irrespective of treatment and time. Participants who had a more anti-inflammatory dietary inflammatory index had less impairment in functioning (p = 0.01). Combination treatment may attenuate the adverse effects of pro-inflammatory diet (p = 0.03) on functioning. Participants with lower body mass index who received combination treatment (p = 0.02) or N-acetylcysteine (p = 0.02) showed greater clinician-rated improvement. Conclusion: These data support a possible association between diet (quality and inflammatory potential), body mass index and response to treatment for bipolar depression in the context of a nutraceutical trial. The results should be interpreted cautiously because of limitations, including numerous null findings, modest sample size and being secondary analyses.
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饮食质量、饮食炎症指数和体重指数作为双相情感障碍成年患者对辅助n -乙酰半胱氨酸和线粒体药物反应的预测因子:一项随机安慰剂对照试验的亚研究
目的:我们旨在探讨饮食质量、饮食炎症潜能或体重指数与双相抑郁症营养治疗临床试验结果之间的关系。方法:这是一项随机对照试验的子研究,双相抑郁症患者提供了饮食摄入数据(n = 133)。参与者接受16周的辅助治疗,要么单独使用安慰剂或n -乙酰半胱氨酸,要么联合使用包括n -乙酰半胱氨酸在内的线粒体增强营养品(联合治疗)。受试者在停药后4周(第20周)随访。通过维多利亚癌症委员会流行病学研究饮食问卷第2版对饮食进行评估,将其转换为澳大利亚推荐食物评分来衡量饮食质量,并将能量调整饮食炎症指数评分来衡量饮食的炎症潜力。他们还测量了身体质量指数。使用广义估计方程模型来评估饮食质量、能量调整饮食炎症指数评分和/或体重指数是否是对主要试验的重要结果(抑郁症状、临床评定的改善和功能测量)的反应的预测因子。结果:与安慰剂相比,在接受联合治疗的参与者中,澳大利亚推荐食物评分、饮食炎症指数或体重指数评分无法预测抑郁评分的变化。然而,饮食质量较好的参与者(澳大利亚推荐食物评分)报告一般抑郁和双相抑郁症状减少(分别为p = 0.01和p = 0.03),临床医生评价的改善程度更大(p = 0.02),与治疗和时间无关。饮食炎症指数更抗炎的参与者功能受损更少(p = 0.01)。联合治疗可减轻促炎饮食对功能的不良影响(p = 0.03)。接受联合治疗(p = 0.02)或n-乙酰半胱氨酸(p = 0.02)的低体重指数参与者表现出更大的临床评价改善。结论:在一项营养试验中,这些数据支持饮食(质量和炎症潜能)、体重指数和双相抑郁症治疗反应之间可能存在的关联。结果应谨慎解释,因为局限性,包括大量的零发现,适度的样本量和二次分析。
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