Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Abstract 23081: Anti-inflammatory Effect of Whole-Food Plant-Based Vegan Diet vs the American Heart Association - Recommended Diet in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: The Randomized EVADE CAD Trial
View through CrossRef
Background:
The effect of a whole-food plant-based vegan diet vs an AHA-recommended diet on inflammatory, lipid, and glucometabolic profiles remains uncertain.
Methods:
This prospective blinded end-point trial randomized 100 patients with invasive angiographically-defined coronary artery disease (CAD) to 8 weeks of a vegan or AHA diet. Participants were provided weekly groceries for their assigned diet strategy, sample 2-week menus, tools to measure portion size, and on-going consultation with the study dietitian. Dietary adherence was measured by two weekly 24-hour dietary recalls and plasma and urine trimethylamine-
N
-oxide levels. Participants also completed a 4-day food record during the week prior to the baseline, 4-, and 8-week study visits. The primary endpoint was serum hsCRP concentration. A linear mixed effect model was used to model the log-transformed endpoints (to correct for skewness), evaluate the change in endpoint over time within treatment group, and test the interaction between time and treatment. The primary analysis was also covariate-adjusted.
Results:
Baseline characteristics are shown in Table 1. Two subjects withdrew from the vegan group after randomization, but dietary adherence remained higher in the vegan vs AHA group at the 4-week (96% vs 84%, p=0.09) and 8-week (94% vs 70%, p=0.003) visits. Endpoints are shown in Table 2.
Conclusion:
A vegan diet significantly reduced systemic inflammation, as evidenced by hsCRP, in patients with CAD on guideline-directed medical therapy, while an AHA diet did not. This is the first rigorous study to comprehensively assess multiple indices of cardiovascular risk between a vegan and AHA diet.
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Title: Abstract 23081: Anti-inflammatory Effect of Whole-Food Plant-Based Vegan Diet vs the American Heart Association - Recommended Diet in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: The Randomized EVADE CAD Trial
Description:
Background:
The effect of a whole-food plant-based vegan diet vs an AHA-recommended diet on inflammatory, lipid, and glucometabolic profiles remains uncertain.
Methods:
This prospective blinded end-point trial randomized 100 patients with invasive angiographically-defined coronary artery disease (CAD) to 8 weeks of a vegan or AHA diet.
Participants were provided weekly groceries for their assigned diet strategy, sample 2-week menus, tools to measure portion size, and on-going consultation with the study dietitian.
Dietary adherence was measured by two weekly 24-hour dietary recalls and plasma and urine trimethylamine-
N
-oxide levels.
Participants also completed a 4-day food record during the week prior to the baseline, 4-, and 8-week study visits.
The primary endpoint was serum hsCRP concentration.
A linear mixed effect model was used to model the log-transformed endpoints (to correct for skewness), evaluate the change in endpoint over time within treatment group, and test the interaction between time and treatment.
The primary analysis was also covariate-adjusted.
Results:
Baseline characteristics are shown in Table 1.
Two subjects withdrew from the vegan group after randomization, but dietary adherence remained higher in the vegan vs AHA group at the 4-week (96% vs 84%, p=0.
09) and 8-week (94% vs 70%, p=0.
003) visits.
Endpoints are shown in Table 2.
Conclusion:
A vegan diet significantly reduced systemic inflammation, as evidenced by hsCRP, in patients with CAD on guideline-directed medical therapy, while an AHA diet did not.
This is the first rigorous study to comprehensively assess multiple indices of cardiovascular risk between a vegan and AHA diet.
Related Results
Early Onset of Coronary Subclavian Steal Syndrome: A Case Report and Literature Review
Early Onset of Coronary Subclavian Steal Syndrome: A Case Report and Literature Review
Abstract
Introduction
Coronary subclavian steal syndrome (CSSS) is a rare phenomenon that often goes undiagnosed and causes severe complications, including death. This report prese...
Emerging Evidence of IgG4-Related Disease in Pericarditis: A Systematic Review
Emerging Evidence of IgG4-Related Disease in Pericarditis: A Systematic Review
Abstract
Introduction
Immunoglobulin G4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is a recently identified immune-mediated condition that is debilitating and often overlooked. While IgG4-RD has be...
GW24-e1019 Characteristics of clinic and coronary lesion in peri-menopausal female patients with coronary artery disease
GW24-e1019 Characteristics of clinic and coronary lesion in peri-menopausal female patients with coronary artery disease
Objectives
To investigate the clinical and angiographic characteristics of peri-menopausal female patients with coronary artery disease (CAD).
...
e0543 Clinical and coronary angiography characteristics between young (<45) and old (>60) patients with coronary artery disease
e0543 Clinical and coronary angiography characteristics between young (<45) and old (>60) patients with coronary artery disease
Objective
To study the clinical Clinical and coronary angiography characteristics between young (≤45) and old (>60) patients with coronary artery disease.
...
e0425 Clinical and coronary angiography characteristics between young (≤45) and old (>60) patients with coronary artery disease
e0425 Clinical and coronary angiography characteristics between young (≤45) and old (>60) patients with coronary artery disease
Objective
To study the clinical Clinical and coronary angiography characteristics between young (≤45) and old (>60) patients with coronary artery disease.
...
A study on risk factors of coronary artery disease in Chong Qing city
A study on risk factors of coronary artery disease in Chong Qing city
Objective
To investigate the relationship between risk factors and coronary artery disease in Chong Qing city, and to provide scientific basis for preventing and ...
e0392 Relationship between retinal vasculopathy and coronary artery disease
e0392 Relationship between retinal vasculopathy and coronary artery disease
Background and objective
Studies showed that atherosclerosis is a systemic disease. Parameters representing peripheral artery atherosclerosis, such as decreased a...
Genetic relations between leukocyte counts, type 1 diabetes, and coronary artery disease
Genetic relations between leukocyte counts, type 1 diabetes, and coronary artery disease
Abstract
Hypothesis/Aim
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is associated with excess coronary artery disease (CAD) risk even when known card...

