Abstract

Importance

Oxidative stress and vascular impairment are believed to partly mediate age-related cognitive decline, a strong risk factor for development of dementia. Epidemiologic studies suggest that a Mediterranean diet, an antioxidant-rich cardioprotective dietary pattern, delays cognitive decline, but clinical trial evidence is lacking.

Objective

To investigate whether a Mediterranean diet supplemented with antioxidant-rich foods influences cognitive function compared with a control diet.

Design, Setting, and Participants

Parallel-group randomized clinical trial of 447 cognitively healthy volunteers from Barcelona, Spain (233 women [52.1%]; mean age, 66.9 years), at high cardiovascular risk were enrolled into the Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea nutrition intervention trial from October 1, 2003, through December 31, 2009. All patients underwent neuropsychological assessment at inclusion and were offered retesting at the end of the study.

Interventions

Participants were randomly assigned to a Mediterranean diet supplemented with extravirgin olive oil (1 L/wk), a Mediterranean diet supplemented with mixed nuts (30 g/d), or a control diet (advice to reduce dietary fat).

Main Outcomes and Measures

Rates of cognitive change over time based on a neuropsychological test battery: Mini-Mental State Examination, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT), Animals Semantic Fluency, Digit Span subtest from the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Verbal Paired Associates from the Wechsler Memory Scale, and the Color Trail Test. We used meanzscores of change in each test to construct 3 cognitive composites: memory, frontal (attention and executive function), and global.

Results

Follow-up cognitive tests were available in 334 participants after intervention (median, 4.1 years). In multivariate analyses adjusted for confounders, no between-group differences were observed for cognitive tests. Similarly adjusted cognitive composites (meanzscores with 95% CIs) for changes above baseline of the memory composite were 0.04 (−0.10 to 0.17) for the Mediterranean diet plus olive oil, 0.10 (−0.04 to 0.24;P = .04 vs controls) for the Mediterranean diet plus nuts, and −0.16 (−0.32 to −0.01) for the control diet. Respective changes from baseline of the frontal cognition composite were 0.23 (0.02 to 0.43;P = .004 vs controls), 0.03 (−0.26 to 0.32), and −0.33 (−0.57 to −0.09). Changes from baseline of the global cognition composite were 0.04 (−0.12 to 0.20;P = .008 vs controls) for the Mediterranean diet plus olive oil, −0.04 (−0.27 to 0.19) for the Mediterranean diet plus nuts, and −0.37 (−0.56 to −0.17) for the control diet. All cognitive composites significantly (P < .05) decreased from baseline in controls.

Conclusions and Relevance

In an older population, a Mediterranean diet supplemented with olive oil or nuts was associated with improved composite measures of cognitive function.

Trial Registration

isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN35739639

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