Associations of overall and specific carbohydrate intake with anxiety status evolution in the prospective NutriNet-Santé population-based cohort

Junko Kose, Pauline Duquenne, Margaux Robert, Charlotte Debras, Pilar Galan, Sandrine Péneau, Serge Hercberg, Mathilde Touvier, Valentina A. Andreeva*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We investigated the association between carbohydrate intake and anxiety evolution within the general-population NutriNet-Santé cohort (N = 15,602; 73.8% female; mean age = 53.8y; mean follow-up = 5.4y). Carbohydrate intake was estimated at baseline from ≥ 2 24-h dietary records. Trait anxiety (STAI-T) was measured once at baseline (2013–2016) and once at follow-up (2020), resulting in 4 groups: “None” = absence of high anxiety (STAI-T > 40 points) at any time point; “Transient” = high anxiety only at baseline; “Onset at follow-up” = high anxiety only at follow-up; “Persistent” = high anxiety at baseline and follow-up. Polytomous logistic regression models revealed that sweetened beverage intake was associated with higher odds of “Transient” anxiety (ORQ4vsQ1 = 1.11; 95% CI 1.02–1.21). Intake of complex carbohydrates (ORQ4vsQ1 = 1.12; 1.01–1.25) was associated with higher odds of anxiety “Onset at follow-up.” The % energy from carbohydrates (ORQ4vsQ1 = 1.11; 1.03–1.19), intakes of total carbohydrates (ORQ4vsQ1 = 1.10; 1.03–1.18) and complex carbohydrates (ORQ4vsQ1 = 1.09; 1.02–1.17) were associated with higher odds of “Persistent” anxiety, whereas 100% fruit juice intake showed lower odds of “Persistent” anxiety (ORQ4vsQ1 = 0.87; 0.81–0.94). This prospective study found significant associations between dietary carbohydrate intake and anxiety status evolution among French adults. The findings could help inform dietary interventions aimed at anxiety prevention and management.

Original languageEnglish
Article number21647
JournalScientific Reports
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

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