Differential associations of dietary inflammatory potential, antioxidant capacity, and Mediterranean diet adherence with biological aging: A UK Biobank study

Jul 25, 2025The journal of nutrition, health & aging

How diet’s inflammation, antioxidants, and Mediterranean pattern relate differently to biological aging

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Abstract

Higher pro-inflammatory diet scores are associated with increased biological age acceleration in a study of 46,755 UK Biobank participants.

  • Pro-inflammatory diets, indicated by higher Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII) scores, are linked to greater biological age acceleration, as measured by KDM-BA and PhenoAge.
  • Antioxidant-rich diets, reflected by higher Composite Dietary Antioxidant Index (CDAI) scores, show an inverse relationship with biological age acceleration.
  • Adherence to a Mediterranean diet, assessed using Alternative Mediterranean Diet (aMED) scores, is associated with reduced odds of biological age acceleration.
  • Nonlinear positive associations exist between DII scores and PhenoAge acceleration, while nonlinear negative associations are seen for CDAI and near-linear negative trends for aMED.
  • Mediation analyses suggest that anti-inflammatory and antioxidant mechanisms may explain 15.7%-50.4% of the relationship between Mediterranean diet adherence and biological age acceleration.

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