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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Centre for Ageing and Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Background: Older persons are at risk of both poor nutrition and increased oxidative stress. Plasma ascorbate concentrations fall with increasing age, and concentrations of other antioxidants may also be reduced.
Objective: The goal was to examine the association between antioxidants and mortality in older persons.
Design: We randomly selected persons aged 75-84 y from the lists of 51 British family practitioners taking part in a randomized trial of assessment of older persons. A total of 1214 participants provided a blood sample and were interviewed about their usual diet with the use of a food-frequency questionnaire. Statistical analyses were based on deaths after a median of 4.4 y of follow-up, and hazard ratios were estimated for quintiles of dietary or blood antioxidants.
Results: We found strong inverse trends for blood ascorbate
concentrations with all-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality,
which were only marginally reduced after adjustment for confounders or supplement use. Those in the lowest fifth (< 17
µmol/L) had the highest mortality, whereas those in the highest
fifth (> 66 µmol/L) had a mortality risk nearly half that (hazard
ratio = 0.54; 95% CI: 0.34, 0.84). Similar results were found after
the exclusion of those subjects with cardiovascular disease or
cancer at baseline (hazard ratio = 0.51; 0.28, 0.93). In fully
adjusted models, there was no evidence for an influence of
-tocopherol, ß-carotene, or retinol on total mortality. Dietary
antioxidants measured by the food-frequency questionnaire were
not associated with all-cause or cardiovascular disease mortality.
Conclusion: Low blood vitamin C concentrations in the older British population are strongly predictive of mortality.
Key Words: Antioxidant vitamins vitamin C older persons prospective study mortality
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