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Mediterranean diet and associations with the gut microbiota and pediatric-onset multiple sclerosis using trivariate analysis

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posted on 2025-01-02, 05:24 authored by AI Mirza, F Zhu, N Knox, Lucinda BlackLucinda Black, A Daly, C Bonner, G Van Domselaar, CN Bernstein, RA Marrie, J Hart, EA Yeh, A Bar-Or, J O’Mahony, Y Zhao, W Hsiao, B Banwell, E Waubant, H Tremlett
Abstract Background The interplay between diet and the gut microbiota in multiple sclerosis (MS) is poorly understood. We aimed to assess the interrelationship between diet, the gut microbiota, and MS. Methods We conducted a case-control study including 95 participants (44 pediatric-onset MS cases, 51 unaffected controls) enrolled from the Canadian Pediatric Demyelinating Disease Network study. All had completed a food frequency questionnaire ≤21-years of age, and 59 also provided a stool sample. Results Here we show that a 1-point increase in a Mediterranean diet score is associated with 37% reduced MS odds (95%CI: 10%–53%). Higher fiber and iron intakes are also associated with reduced MS odds. Diet, not MS, explains inter-individual gut microbiota variation. Several gut microbes abundances are associated with both the Mediterranean diet score and having MS, and these microbes are potential mediators of the protective associations of a healthier diet. Conclusions Our findings suggest that the potential interaction between diet and the gut microbiota is relevant in MS.

History

Journal

Communications Medicine

Volume

4

Article number

148

Pagination

1-10

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2730-664X

eISSN

2730-664X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Nature Research

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