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Published in: European Journal of Epidemiology 7/2021

01-07-2021 | Stroke | META-ANALYSIS

Calcium intake, calcium supplementation and cardiovascular disease and mortality in the British population: EPIC-norfolk prospective cohort study and meta-analysis

Authors: Tiberiu A. Pana, Mohsen Dehghani, Hamid Reza Baradaran, Samuel R. Neal, Adrian D. Wood, Chun Shing Kwok, Yoon K. Loke, Robert N. Luben, Mamas A. Mamas, Kay-Tee Khaw, Phyo Kyaw Myint

Published in: European Journal of Epidemiology | Issue 7/2021

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Abstract

The role of dietary calcium in cardiovascular disease prevention is unclear. We aimed to determine the association between calcium intake and incident cardiovascular disease and mortality. Data were extracted from the European Prospective Investigation of Cancer, Norfolk (EPIC-Norfolk). Multivariable Cox regressions analysed associations between calcium intake (dietary and supplemental) and cardiovascular disease (myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, aortic stenosis, peripheral vascular disease) and mortality (cardiovascular and all-cause). The results of this study were pooled with those from published prospective cohort studies in a meta-analsyis, stratifying by average calcium intake using a 700 mg/day threshold. A total of 17,968 participants aged 40–79 years were followed up for a median of 20.36 years (20.32–20.38). Compared to the first quintile of calcium intake (< 770 mg/day), intakes between 771 and 926 mg/day (second quintile) and 1074–1254 mg/day (fourth quintile) were associated with reduced all-cause mortality (HR 0.91 (0.83–0.99) and 0.85 (0.77–0.93), respectively) and cardiovascular mortality [HR 0.95 (0.87–1.04) and 0.93 (0.83-1.04)]. Compared to the first quintile of calcium intake, second, third, fourth, but not fifth quintiles were associated with fewer incident strokes: respective HR 0.84 (0.72–0.97), 0.83 (0.71–0.97), 0.78 (0.66–0.92) and 0.95 (0.78–1.15). The meta-analysis results suggest that high levels of calcium intake were associated with decreased all-cause mortality, but not cardiovascular mortality, regardless of average calcium intake. Calcium supplementation was associated with cardiovascular and all-cause mortality amongst women, but not men. Moderate dietary calcium intake may protect against cardiovascular and all-cause mortality and incident stroke. Calcium supplementation may reduce mortality in women.
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Metadata
Title
Calcium intake, calcium supplementation and cardiovascular disease and mortality in the British population: EPIC-norfolk prospective cohort study and meta-analysis
Authors
Tiberiu A. Pana
Mohsen Dehghani
Hamid Reza Baradaran
Samuel R. Neal
Adrian D. Wood
Chun Shing Kwok
Yoon K. Loke
Robert N. Luben
Mamas A. Mamas
Kay-Tee Khaw
Phyo Kyaw Myint
Publication date
01-07-2021
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Keyword
Stroke
Published in
European Journal of Epidemiology / Issue 7/2021
Print ISSN: 0393-2990
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7284
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-020-00710-8

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