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                | 2018/03/03 |   
                | JCL - Omega-3 FA Inversely Associated with Mortality and Incident CVD |   
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                    Harris WS1, Tintle NL2, Etherton MR3, et al. Erythrocyte long-chain omega-3 fatty acid levels are inversely associated with mortality and with incident cardiovascular disease: The Framingham Heart Study.  J Clin Lipidol. 2018 Mar 2. pii: S1933-28  |  
                | BACKGROUND: The extent to which omega-3 fatty acid status is related to risk for death from any cause and for incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains controversial.
 OBJECTIVE:
 To examine these associations in the Framingham Heart Study.
 DESIGN:
 Prospective and observational.
 SETTING:
 Framingham Heart Study Offspring cohort.
 MEASUREMENTS:
 The exposure marker was red blood cell levels of eicosapentaenoic and docosahexaenoic acids (the Omega-3 Index) measured at baseline. Outcomes included mortality (total, CVD, cancer, and other) and total CVD events in participants free of CVD at baseline. Follow-up was for a median of 7.3 years. Cox proportional hazards models were adjusted for 18 variables (demographic, clinical status, therapeutic, and CVD risk factors).
 RESULTS:
 Among the 2500 participants (mean age 66 years, 54% women), there were 350 deaths (58 from CVD, 146 from cancer, 128 from other known causes, and 18 from unknown causes). There were 245 CVD events. In multivariable-adjusted analyses, a higher Omega-3 Index was associated with significantly lower risks (P-values for trends across quintiles) for total mortality (P = .02), for non-CVD and non-cancer mortality (P = .009), and for total CVD events (P = .008). Those in the highest (>6.8%) compared to those in the lowest Omega-3 Index quintiles (<4.2%) had a 34% lower risk for death from any cause and 39% lower risk for incident CVD. These associations were generally stronger for docosahexaenoic acid than for eicosapentaenoic acid. When total cholesterol was compared with the Omega-3 Index in the same models, the latter was significantly related with these outcomes, but the former was not.
 LIMITATIONS:
 Relatively short follow-up time and one-time exposure assessment.
 CONCLUSIONS:
 A higher Omega-3 Index was associated with reduced risk of both CVD and all-cause mortality.
 
 PMID: 29559306
 
 See following website for full manuscript.
 
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                | Source: 
								http://www.lipidjournal.com/article/S1933-2874(18)30061-8/fulltext |  
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