New Greek study: BENECOL® DIET AND MEDITERRANEAN DIET EQUALLY EFFECTIVE IN LOWERING ESTIMATED CVD RISK
Raisio plc Press release 15 December 2009
New Greek study:
BENECOL® DIET AND MEDITERRANEAN DIET EQUALLY EFFECTIVE IN LOWERING ESTIMATED CVD
RISK
A new Greek study shows that a Benecol diet with plant stanol ester and a
Mediterranean diet are equally effective in reducing the estimated risk of
cardiovascular diseases (CVD). The study was conducted at the Aristotelian
University in Thessaloniki, Greece, and it was published online in Nutrition,
Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases1 at the end of November.
The study compared the effects of a regular cholesterol-lowering diet and two
study diets. One of the study diets was a Mediterranean diet and the other a
Benecol diet, including plant stanol ester spread (2 g plant stanols per day).
Altogether 150 subjects with mildly elevated cholesterol levels participated in
the 4-month long intervention. An estimated CVD risk was assessed by three
different risk engines: PROCAM, Framingham, and Reynolds risk engines.
The Mediterranean diet gradually reduced the levels of several risk factors of
CVD, including total and LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure.
These moderate but significant changes resulted in a significant 24-32%
reduction in the estimated CVD risk. Comparatively, the plant stanol
ester-containing diet induced a fast and substantial reduction in total and LDL
cholesterol (-14% and -16%, respectively), resulting in a 26-30% reduction in
the estimated CVD risk already after 1 month. These effects were sustained for
the whole 4 month duration of the study.
The results of this study further strengthen the role of the Mediterranean diet
rich in fruits and vegetables, vegetable oil, legumes, whole grains, fish, and
low-fat dairy products in CVD risk reduction. However, adherence to this type of
diet is decreasing even in countries like Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal, and
despite nutritional recommendations, the majority of Western people do not
follow such a diet.
The new information provided by this study is that the Benecol diet, enriched
with plant stanol ester, induced a similar effective reduction in estimated CVD
risk as the renowned Mediterranean diet. Thus, a simple dietary change like the
use of Benecol products as part of the daily diet, seems to have significant
health benefits. "Plant stanol ester-enriched foods seem to be a very useful
option to reduce CVD risk especially for those who do not adopt a Mediterranean
diet," the head researcher of the study, professor Athyros, concluded.
Plant stanol ester is the cholesterol-lowering food ingredient patented globally
by Raisio, and it is recommended internationally for the treatment of
hypercholesterolemia. A coronary heart disease risk reduction health claim for
plant stanol ester was recently accepted by the EU Commission. Benecol®, the
original expert in cholesterol lowering, is a global trademark owned globally by
Raisio.
RAISIO PLC
Heidi Hirvonen
Communications Manager
tel. +358 50 567 3060
Further information:
Ingmar Wester, R&D Director, Ingredients Division, tel. +358 50 601 32
Susanna Rosin, Nutrition Manager, Ingredients Division, tel. +358 400 878 637
Vasilios G Athyros, MD, professor, Atherosclerosis and Metabolic Syndrome Units,
2nd Propedeutic Department of Internal Medicine, Aristotelian University,
Hippocration Hospital, Greece, tel. +30 2310 892 606
Source:
Athyros VG et al. Effect of plant stanol ester-containing spread, placebo
spread, or Mediterranean diet on estimated cardiovascular risk and lipid,
inflammatory and haemostatic factors. Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis (2009),
doi:10.1016/j.numecd.2009.08.014