A Clinician’s Guide for Trending Cardiovascular Nutrition Controversies Part II: Optimizing Dietary Patterns for ASCVD Prevention

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of death in the United States despite advancements in cardiovascular care. Evidence strongly supports the effectiveness of dietary interventions in preventing CVD. This guide emphasizes evidence-based dietary patterns to prevent atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and manage related risk factors like hyperlipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, and obesity. An optimal diet for ASCVD prevention includes a high intake of fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds, plant protein, and fatty fish. Healthful dietary patterns share common components, such as increased consumption of these foods and reduced intake of saturated fat, dietary cholesterol, salt, refined grains, and ultra-processed foods. This guide also addresses dietary recommendations for special populations, including children, older adults, and considerations for nutrition and social determinants of health in ASCVD prevention.

Primary and Secondary Prevention of ASCVD Through Diet

Globally, 90% of cardiovascular risk can be attributed to nine modifiable factors, including abnormal lipids, smoking, hypertension, diabetes, abdominal obesity, psychosocial factors, low consumption of fruits and vegetables, excessive alcohol intake and regular physical activity. Maintaining a healthy lifestyle throughout life is crucial for preventing ASCVD. Studies like INTERHEART have identified low fruit and vegetable consumption as a major modifiable factor associated with myocardial infarction (MI). The Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study also noted a lower risk of all-cause mortality among adults with higher consumption of fruits, vegetables, and legumes.

Major guidelines, including those from the American College of Cardiology (ACC), American Heart Association (AHA), and the European Society of Cardiology, recommend a plant-predominant diet. These guidelines advise minimizing processed meats, refined carbohydrates, and sweetened beverages; reducing dietary cholesterol and sodium; replacing saturated fat with monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats; and avoiding trans fats. Diets like the Mediterranean, DASH, healthy vegetarian, and exclusively plant-based diets align with these recommendations. The AHA’s 2021 Scientific Statement further supports these dietary patterns, emphasizing minimally processed foods. Similar dietary patterns are recommended for both primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular health.

Mediterranean Diet

The Mediterranean diet, inspired by traditional eating habits in countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea, emphasizes leafy green vegetables, fruits, nuts, legumes, whole grains, extra virgin olive oil (EVOO), fish, and seafood. Poultry, eggs, and dairy are consumed in moderation, while red meats and sweets are limited. This diet has shown efficacy in both primary and secondary CVD prevention, reducing cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.

The Seven Countries Study was among the first to suggest cardiometabolic benefits of the Mediterranean diet. Men aged 40–59 years from Yugoslavia, Italy, Greece, Finland, Netherlands, Japan, and the United States were recruited. Countries with a Mediterranean diet style pattern reported a lower incidence of CHD and the highest survival rates compared with non-Mediterranean regions. Another large cohort study of 22,043 adults in Greece found that greater adherence to a traditional Mediterranean diet was associated with a significant reduction in all-cause mortality, CHD death, and cancer death. In a secondary prevention cohort of 15,482 patients with stable CHD, higher adherence to a Mediterranean-style diet was independently associated with a reduction in cardiovascular events.

RCT data also support the favorable benefits of the Mediterranean diet for CVD prevention. The Lyon Diet Heart Study, was an RCT among a secondary prevention population that evaluated whether the Mediterranean diet reduced the rates of recurrence after a first MI compared to a “prudent diet.” Post-MI patients randomized to the Mediterranean diet experienced a significant reduction in recurrent non-fatal MI and mortality compared to the control diet.

The Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea (PREDIMED) study was a primary prevention RCT that enrolled 7447 participants at high cardiovascular risk, but with no CVD at enrollment. Participants were randomized to one of three diets, a Mediterranean diet enriched with EVOO, a Mediterranean diet enriched with nuts, or a low fat diet and were followed for 4.8 years. Compared to the low-fat diet, both Mediterranean diet patterns were associated with a reduced risk of composite cardiovascular endpoint (MI, stroke, or CV death), predominantly driven by the reduction in stroke.

The DASH Diet

The DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet consists of fruits, vegetables, lean protein, low-fat dairy, and limits intake of sodium and saturated fats. Originally proposed by the National Institutes of Health in the 1990s as an intervention to treat hypertension, it has been shown to reduce blood pressure in patients with and without hypertension.

Observational data have associated the DASH dietary pattern with decreased incidence of diabetes, CVD, and heart failure. In a recent RCT of 92 patients with non-obstructive coronary artery disease, participants randomized to DASH diet plus optimal medical therapy (OMT) experienced greater reduction in non-calcified plaque and less atherosclerosis progression than those randomized to OMT alone.

Vegetarian and Plant‐Based Diets

A healthy vegetarian diet also emphasizes intake of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and seeds, but substitutes meat, seafood, and poultry with soy products or other plant-based protein sources. Some vegetarian diets include dairy and/or eggs, while an exclusively plant-based diet (PBD) eliminates all animal-based products. A meta-analysis of observational studies concluded that a vegetarian diet was associated with a significant reduction in ischemic heart disease mortality compared to a non-vegetarian diet.

Not all vegetarian diets are necessarily beneficial and depend on what foods are chosen to replace traditional protein sources. A large meta-analysis of people eating PBD compared diets made up of healthier foods (fruits, vegetables, nuts, legumes, whole grains, and vegetable oils) versus less healthy foods (juices, sugar-sweetened beverages, refined grains, potatoes, and sweets). Higher adherence to a more healthful PBD was associated with a significant reduction in incident CHD; conversely, PBD consisting more of the unhealthy foods was associated with increased CHD risk. In a cross-over RCT, a low-fat PBD lead to a greater calorie deficit and subsequently improved body weight, lipids, and insulin sensitivity more than a Mediterranean diet, although Mediterranean had slightly greater blood pressure reduction.

Low Carbohydrate and Ketogenic Diets

Low carbohydrate diets are defined as having net dietary carbohydrates contribute ∼10–25% of total energy intake, whereas very low carbohydrate, ketogenic diets restrict net carbohydrate consumption to ≤10% of energy intake and may also limit protein consumption. Within these macronutrient constraints, there are a wide variety of possible dietary patterns such as different relative contributions of plant versus animal products, non-starchy vegetables, nuts, low carbohydrate fruit, and degree of processing. Such dietary patterns are advocated for both potential weight loss and improved diabetes control versus higher carbohydrate dietary patterns. Nevertheless, longitudinal cohort data indicate that the healthfulness of relatively lower carbohydrate intake with long-term CVD risk depended on the plant vs animal sources of non-carbohydrate calories. In other words, diets generally higher in vegetable sources of protein and fat were related to lower CVD risk while diets higher in animal sources were associated with higher risk.

Furthermore, some studies raise concerns about the safety of an animal-based ketogenic diet including occasional marked increases in LDL-C. In addition, lower carbohydrate dietary patterns may limit the consumption of healthful foods, such as fruits, unrefined whole grains, and legumes. While a high-fiber plant-predominant low carbohydrate dietary pattern with a low saturated fat content may hypothetically be of benefit, further investigation is needed. Thus, this article does not suggest encouraging patients to adopt a high saturated fat, animal-based ketogenic diet-pattern for primary prevention of CVD.

Intermittent Energy Restriction

Intermittent energy restriction (IER), includes intermittent fasting (i.e. fasting for 16–48 h) and time restricted eating (TRE) (i.e. restricting feeding to specific windows of time each day, such as for 8–10 or fewer hours). IER has been advocated as a weight loss/maintenance strategy and to improve cardiometabolic health. These feeding strategies may be useful for the primary prevention of CVD. However, while supported by promising animal data and preclinical human data, IER has largely shown no to minimal benefit above continuous energy restriction (CER) for weight loss and for cardiometabolic health in humans, although poor compliance in long-term trials undermines quality and interpretation of prior studies.

In an analysis of eleven randomized studies comparing intermittent fasting to CER, while weight loss was seen in both groups, no difference in weight loss and minimal to no differences in a variety of cardiometabolic parameters were found between the groups. In an RCT of TRE vs CER in 116 individuals, no difference in weight loss or cardiometabolic parameters were found. However, in a smaller RCT with only 8 men, a 6-hour TRE period ending by 3pm versus a 12 h feeding period was associated with improved cardiometabolic health without a difference in weight loss.

While IER may be helpful for modest weight loss, IER does not appear to have clear incremental benefit above CER for either weight loss or for cardiometabolic health. Furthermore, there are currently no IER studies with hard cardiovascular outcomes.

Challenges in Nutritional Studies for CVD Prevention

RCTs provide the best evidence base to shape guidelines, however they are difficult to do for dietary interventions as participants are not blinded, may not adhere to their assigned diet, and require long term follow-up for hard ASCVD outcomes. Most of the RCTs on dietary interventions have been short-term studies with surrogate endpoints such as blood pressure, lipids, and weight change, with a few exceptions as noted above for the Mediterranean diet. Thus, data from observational studies with long-term follow-up for ASCVD outcomes play an important role in informing health promotion and prevention recommendations. Nevertheless, a methodological challenges of observational studies include valid ascertainment of habitual long-term diet and confounding from social and other behavioral/lifestyle determinants of CVD, potentially biasing diet/outcome associations; thus, recommendations should be based on the accumulation of evidence across a number of research domains, incorporating their consistency, quality, validity, and certainty of individual studies and the body of evidence overall.

Addressing ASCVD Risk Factors: Nutritional Approaches

Hyperlipidemia

The impact of major macronutrient groupings on serum lipid and lipoprotein levels has been extensively investigated. Macronutrients are typically grouped as: (1) carbohydrate; (2) saturated fatty acids (SFAs); (3) cis monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs), rich in oleic acid; (4) cis polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), with high omega 6 linoleic acid and often accompanying omega 3 alpha-linolenic acid; (5) protein; (6) marine source omega 3s, rich in eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). In addition to the macronutrients, a sizable body of randomized trial evidence evaluating the relationship of other food components, including dietary cholesterol, dietary fibers, phytosterols/stanols, and polyphenol subclasses (e.g. isoflavones), and lipids/lipoproteins exists.

Consistent evidence across numerous meta-analyses allow for pairwise macronutrient comparisons and the general conclusions that: (1) SFA sources, predominantly feeding tropical oils like coconut oil, eggs, meats, and dairy fats, increase total, and LDL-C, relative to all other macronutrient classes; and (2) carbohydrates have relatively neutral effects on LDL-C, though effect modification by concomitant intakes of viscous fiber have relevant effects in decreasing LDL-C. MUFAs exhibit similar, or slightly greater, total and LDL-C lowering effects than carbohydrate. Linoleic-acid-rich PUFAs exhibit the largest reductions in total and LDL-C, with the greatest reduction in total and LDL-C resulting when these replace SFA sources.

Both MUFA and PUFA modestly lower triglycerides when replacing SFA, and to a greater extent when replacing carbohydrate. Thus, the net apoB lowering when carbohydrates replace SFA is modest, relative to more significant decreases observed when SFA is replaced by MUFA and PUFA.

Marine source omega 3 fatty acids found in fatty fish exhibit small effects on serum lipids when consumed at typical nutritional doses. Dietary cholesterol’s effect on LDL-C is smaller in magnitude relative to changes induced by fatty acid composition and are likely non-linear. While the most robust and repeatable evidence of diet’s effects on lipoproteins relate to the influence of macronutrient, other components of the food matrix, as well as their supplemental forms, can influence LDL-C. Phytosterols/stanols (∼2 g/day) can lower LDL-C significantly. Modest effects of viscous soluble fibers on total and LDL-C have been consistently reported with larger effects reported for more viscous fiber types (e.g. konjac root; psyllium). Dietary polyphenols may lower LDL-C as well, though the impact of this heterogeneous class of chemicals has not been repeatedly investigated in controlled studies broadly; a body of evidence exists for soy, both enriched versus depleted for isoflavones, and soy protein replacement studies (most commonly replacing dairy/milk proteins), point towards modest, and heterogeneous, LDL-C lowering effects.

Hypertension

Despite pathophysiologic and therapeutic advances, hypertension remains a leading modifiable risk factor for CVD mortality and disability adjusted life-years in the US and worldwide. In the US, the estimated lifetime risk of developing hypertension after age 45 is 84–93%. This trajectory, however, may not be immutable, as dietary modification is important or beneficial to both prevent and treat hypertension. In a case series from the mid-20th century, Dr. Walter Kempner showed that hypertension could be improved with dietary change, specifically when consuming a low sodium plant-based diet comprised largely of fruits and whole grains. Subsequently, in 1986, a small RCT found that a vegetarian diet lowered blood pressure significantly more than an omnivorous diet and in 1988, Dr. Frank Sacks and colleagues showed that vegetarians tended to have lower blood pressure compared to the general population. As such, the DASH diet was created to have the blood pressure lowering benefits of a vegetarian diet, yet contain enough animal products to make them palatable to non-vegetarian.

The DASH diet is described above (see Dietary Approaches). Relative to a traditional American “western diet”, the DASH diet includes more vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, fiber, fish, and low-fat dairy, and less processed and red meat, saturated fat, and sweets. In a pivotal 8-week RCT comparing a Western diet to a DASH diet, the DASH diet lowered systolic and diastolic blood pressure, by 5.5 mmHg and 3.0 mmHg, more, respectively, than did the Western diet. In study participants with hypertension, the impact of the DASH diet was greater, as systolic and diastolic blood pressure fell by 11.4 mmHg and 5.5 mmHg, respectively. The blood pressure lowering effect of the DASH dietary pattern was further supported by an umbrella review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses of controlled trials, where a DASH dietary pattern led to lower blood pressure.

Dietary sodium also appears to impact blood pressure. Over the course of human evolution, naturally occurring sodium was the only dietary source, leading to an intake of ∼0.5 gm/d. Currently however, the mean intake in the US is around 3.6 gm/d and the global average is ∼3.6gm/d to 4gm/d, with some countries nearing 10 gm/d. In 2017, a systematic analysis of the Global Burden of Disease study noted that 3 million deaths were attributed to excess sodium intake annually. In a recent Mendelian Randomization analysis, dietary sodium was causally associated with salt-sensitive hypertension. Furthermore, observational studies, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews have shown a direct association between dietary sodium intake and blood pressure. Given this concern regarding dietary sodium and blood pressure, the impact of differing amounts of sodium (low, intermediate, and high) within a DASH dietary pattern was studied in a RCT. The lowest sodium DASH dietary group achieved the greatest reductions in blood pressure, supporting lowering sodium intake to achieve lower blood pressure. In 2021, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration released guidance for the food industry regarding salt content, encouraging voluntary salt reduction goals over the next 2.5 years, with the goal to improve the health of the nation.

In further support of a DASH dietary pattern, large prospective cohort studies reinforce the beneficial impact of fruit and vegetable consumption on blood pressure, while also demonstrating an association between greater red and processed meat consumption and higher blood pressure. In a recent meta-analysis of 36 randomized controlled trails and seven crossover studies, a plant based dietary pattern significantly lowered systolic and diastolic blood pressure. This beneficial association of fruit and vegetable consumption on blood pressure may be mediated, in part, by their anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects, vasodilation, and changes in the renin-angiotensin and sympathetic nervous systems.

In addition, dietary nitrate load appears to play a role. In a recent analysis of 53,150 participants with 23-year follow up in the Danish Diet, Cancer, and Health Study it was noted that the highest quintile of vegetable nitrate intake was associated with lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure. In addition, a moderate vegetable nitrate of ∼60 mg/day (one cup of green leafy vegetables) was associated with 15% lower risk of CVD. In a recent open-label large cluster RCT that enrolled 20,995 individuals over 60 with prior history of stroke, salt substitute high in potassium, compared to regular salt was shown to significantly lower the rates of stroke, major cardiovascular events, and death at a median follow up duration of 4.7 years. Based on the totality of evidence and in alignment with the ACC, the AHA and the International Society of Hypertension, the American society for preventive cardiology (ASPC) recommends a low sodium DASH dietary pattern, rich in fruits and vegetables, for the prevention and treatment of hypertension.

Type 2 Diabetes and Obesity

The prevalence of obesity, defined as body mass index ≥ 30 kg/m2 has escalated in recent decades, reaching 42.4% of US adults. Globally, the incidence of diabetes increased from 11.3 million in 1990 to 22.9 million in 2017, and annual US healthcare expenditures for 34 million Americans with the disease exceed $325 billion. Both obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) are risk factors in the development and progression of CVD. Thus, the integration of effective and sustainable dietary recommendations for prevention and treatment of obesity and diabetes is a top public health priority.

The importance of diet for prevention of both obesity and T2D is well-demonstrated. Weight gain in adulthood is primarily due to gains in fat mass, and accumulates gradually peaking after midlife about 1 lb/year. Modest increases in body weight, often imperceptible in the short-term, have been associated with a number of dietary changes in longitudinal observational studies, including increased intakes of potato chips, fries, refined grains, processed meats, unprocessed red meats, and sugar-sweetened beverages. While diets high in calorically dense ultra-processed food can cause excess energy intake and weight gain, it is important to differentiate healthful “smartly processed” foods such as fortified plant milks, grains, and plant protein based meat and egg substitutes, which can add nutrition value in a well-planned dietary pattern. “Smartly processed” foods are those low in saturated fat, refined carbohydrates and dietary cholesterol, consistent with our guideline recommendations for reducing ASCVD risk. Increasing intake of yogurt, fruits (not fruit juices), whole grains, legumes, fish, and nuts have been associated with less weight gain and lower risk of developing obesity. Other foods including cheese, milk, and artificially sweetened beverages may not be related to gradual long-term weight change. The macronutrient composition of the diet may also play a role in long-term weight gain, although the role of total fat, carbohydrates, and protein per se independent of food sources or overall diet quality, is less clear. For example, long-term modest increases in calories from fat from animal sources, but not vegetable sources, has been associated with weight gain. Increasing trans fat and saturated fat at the expense of calories from carbohydrates is also related to long-term gradual weight gain.

In addition to weight gain prevention, diet plays a critical role in weight loss for treatment of overweight and obesity. Experimental evidence supports long-term weight loss (≥12 months) is achievable with interventions that emphasize a variety of diets and eating patterns, with or without explicit guidance for calorie restriction.

Globally, 24.7% of deaths and 34.9% of disability-adjusted life years due to diabetes are estimated to be attributable to poor diet. Epidemiologic studies and short-term RCTs of T2D-related intermediate traits collectively suggest a number of dietary factors and eating patterns are related to lower T2D risk. For example, using the Alternative Healthy Eating Index, an overall diet quality score reflecting the USDA dietary guideline recommendations, is associated with lower T2D risk in general cohort populations, as well as among high risk women with a history of gestational diabetes mellitus. Other dietary patterns that similarly emphasize vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and lean meats, while discouraging sugar-sweetened beverages and red and processed meats, are also consistently associated with lower T2D risk in observational cohorts.

The PREDIMED trial randomized participants to a Mediterranean dietary pattern or low-fat control group for primary prevention of CVD in high-risk older adults in Spain. In a subgroup analysis of n = 418 participants without T2D at baseline, those randomized to the Mediterranean diets vs. the low-fat diet had >50% reduction in T2D risk over ∼4 years follow-up. Accumulating evidence also supports low-carbohydrate plant-based diet, and other food and nutrient patterns for T2D prevention. The Diabetes Prevention Program is a landmark randomized trial that observed a 58% reduction in T2D risk among participants receiving an intensive lifestyle program, compared with control group receiving usual care. As a result of its demonstrated effectiveness, this curriculum has been implemented nationally and world-wide, adapted to several languages, and is even covered by some healthcare insurances for T2D prevention.

Despite advances in understanding and appreciation for the role of diet in obesity and diabetes, trends in prevalence continue to escalate. Therefore, dedicated research efforts need to be maintained to identify optimal dietary interventions and effective strategies for their implementation.

Vitamin Supplementation

Dietary supplement use is widespread in the general population, and patients are frequently interested in the potential for dietary supplements (e.g. vitamins, minerals, herbs, other bioactives) to modify CVD risk. Due to the broad variety of dietary supplements, lack of a structured clinical research program to study their safety profiles or efficacy for clinical endpoints in well-powered trials, as well as the lack of a broader regulatory system to ensure product quality and limit contamination, nearly all professional societies, guideline panels and clinicians do not recommend specific dietary supplements for general prevention/treatment of CVD. Practitioners should be prepared to have patient-centered conversations with regard to dietary supplement use, and be able to communicate the uncertainty in clinical effects of dietary supplements with regard to both disease prevention and risks of supplements.

While enthusiasm for many dietary supplements relies on proposed mechanisms of action with limited clinical data, some supplements have been the subject of significant investigation and are the subject of common queries by patients. A large body of RCT and prospective cohort evidence demonstrates that multivitamin-multimineral supplementation does not confer CVD benefits in the general population. Some supplements (e.g. phytosterols/stanols; viscous fibers) have a significant body of evidence to support risk factor lowering (e.g. LDL-C lowering); however, their utilization in clinical practice remains limited, likely due to unclear net benefits, cost and practicality of continued, long-term use. While enthusiasm for some botanical/herbal supplements abounds (e.g. green tea; turmeric), it should be noted that formulations are not standardized, vary substantially in bioactives across batches and products, can interact with medications, and can contribute to acute liver injury.

Many patients assume dietary supplements, which can be purchased without a prescription, are benign and harmless. However, some supplements have been associated with increased cardiovascular risk such as antioxidant mixtures and niacin. Calcium supplements, particularly in higher doses and when taken without vitamin D, have also been associated with increased risk of vascular events in some (but not all) studies; whereas no such risk has been seen with calcium intake from food sources. Potential risks and benefits of supplement use should be discussed as part of clinician-patient risk discussion.

Special Considerations in Nutritional Approaches in Pediatric Populations for ASCVD Prevention

Primary prevention of ASCVD should begin as early as possible. Although adverse cardiovascular outcomes are typically not seen until middle age, ASCVD risk factors can occur during childhood and adolescence. Identifying modifiable early-life risk factors (e.g. weight, lipid levels, blood pressure, dietary patterns) is necessary to address the high morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular events.

Evidence suggests that childhood risk factors can lead to clinical manifestations of CVD. Familial hypercholesterolemia, which causes high LDL levels in children, increases the risk of midlife coronary events and reduces life expectancy. Similarly, the Pathobiological Determinants of Atherosclerosis in Youth (PDAY) study found strong associations between atherosclerosis and non-HDL-C and hyperglycemia in young individuals.

Of the risk factors identified, weight correlates most strongly from childhood to adulthood. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the prevalence of obesity among children and adolescents is 18.5%, equating to about 13.7 million youth. The Bogalusa Heart Study, which followed >2000 children, found that most participants with a BMI in the 95th to 99th percentile and all those with a BMI >99th percentile developed obesity later in life. Children and adolescents with elevated blood pressure and cholesterol levels were more likely to carry these risk factors into adulthood, especially if weight was a risk factor.

ASCVD prevention in pediatric populations requires compassionate, effective, and individualized approaches to address modifiable risk factors. Recommendations outlined in Table 1 provide practical guidance related to clinical assessment and healthcare delivery in pediatric populations. Recommendations for macronutrients in children by age are outlined in Table 2.

Table 1. Dietary recommendations in pediatric populations.

Dietary Recommendations in Pediatric Populations
Focus on clinical indicators of ASCVD risk (e.g. lipids, blood pressure, glucose) rather than weight. Discussing or prescribing weight loss in pediatric populations may increase the risk of disordered eating and eating disorders. Providers should focus on clinical indicators that provide a more comprehensive assessment of cardiometabolic risk.
Focus on nutrient-dense foods and beverages as recommended in the 2020–2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Consistent evidence suggests that nutrition-dense dietary patterns can decrease future CVD risk. Dietary recommendations should emphasize fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and varied protein foods (e.g. legumes, nuts, seeds, seafood). Acceptable macronutrient composition for age for children are shown in Table 2.
Emphasize small changes in eating behaviors to promote nutrient-dense dietary patterns. Providers should work collaboratively with pediatric patients to establish nutrition-related SMART goals that are focused, feasible, and measurable. Remember to acknowledge and celebrate all forms of progress.
Tailor nutrition recommendations based on cultural and personal food preferences and support children’s ability to self-regulate intake. Clinicians should be aware of cultural dynamics and food practices when working with pediatric patients and their families. Encourage caregivers to foster positive eating environments and introduce nutrient-dense foods but trust children to determine how much and whether to eat these foods.
Provide support for navigating food choices at care centers, schools, and afterschool programs. School meals and child care programs can provide a significant proportion of children’s daily nutritional needs and are an important resource for low-income families. Clinicians should encourage consumption of nutrient-dense options (e.g. whole fruits, fruit cups, steamed or roasted vegetables, salads) when available in school and child care settings.
Involve pediatric patients in discussions about their health status and care plans. Providers should consider patients’ age, ability to comprehend information, and food choice autonomy during clinical visits. Use accessible language and emphasize positive, weight-neutral outcomes of health behavior changes (e.g. increased energy, improved learning ability).

Table 2. Acceptable macronutrient distribution ranges for children aged 2–18 years.

Macronutrient 2 to 3 years 4 to 8 years 9 to 13 years 14 to 18 years
Carbohydrate (% kcal) 45–65% 45–65% 45–65% 45–65%
Fat (% kcal) 30–40% 25–35% 25–35% 25–35%
Protein (% kcal) 5–20% 10–30% 10–30% 10–30%

*Based on the 2020–2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Special Considerations in Nutritional Approaches in Older Adult Populations for ASCVD Prevention

While all nutrition recommendations for ASCVD prevention should ideally be individualized, special considerations for older adult populations are worth highlighting. Evidence from experimental studies indicate similar or greater effects of medical nutrition therapy targeting risk factors (i.e. blood pressure, blood lipids) in the older adult population (>65 year olds). Implementation of specific cardioprotective dietary changes should consider and accommodate the unique metabolic and practical aspects of nutrition that arise as individuals age, as well as the increasing prevalence of comorbidities. For example, older adults are at increased risk of protein-energy malnutrition, as well as micronutrient deficiencies (e.g. Vitamin B12). As individuals age, changes in oral and dental health, as well as neurological function, can influence mastication and oral control, swallowing and taste perception that may impair the ability to readily and safely implement ASCVD prevention recommendations. Where appropriate, individualized recommendations to include fortified and/or medical foods and supplements, as well as to modify food texture, form and gustatory/olfactory profiles may be required to facilitate the intake of cardioprotective dietary patterns.

Nutrition and Social Determinants of Health for ASCVD Prevention

Despite advances in ASCVD treatment and prevention, demographic and socioeconomic disparities persist. Black Americans are more likely to die from ASCVD than any other racial/ethnic group. The prevalence of heart disease is highest among some Native American populations and Black adults have the highest hypertension rates, although awareness and treatment among Black women has recently declined.

It is important to acknowledge that race/ethnicity are social constructs and not reflective of genetic or biological differences in health status. However, race/ethnicity are potential indicators of structural racism and adverse social, economic, and environmental conditions (i.e. social determinants of health) that lead to health inequities. The social determinants of health affecting ASCVD outcomes include inadequate housing, exposure to adversity (e.g. violence, safety concerns), suboptimal health literacy, and food insecurity (lack of access to sufficient, affordable and nutritious food). Therefore, addressing social determinants of health is critical to primary and secondary ASCVD prevention.

Nutrient-dense dietary patterns emphasizing intake of vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, whole grains, and fatty fish are recommended to decrease ASCVD risk factors (Table 3). The REGARDS (REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke) trial linked the Southern dietary pattern higher in refined grains, fried foods, and sweetened beverages with elevated ASCVD risk. An emerging area of research is the causal relationship between the gut microbiota, increased consumption of sodium and cooked meats, and hypertension and ASCVD among Black adults.

Table 3. Recommendations for practice in all patients.

Recommendations for practice in all patients
Screen all patients for food insecurity and refer to food assistance programs and other community food resources. The Hunger Vital Sign is a two-question screening tool to assess food insecurity in clinical settings. Routine screening for food insecurity can be integrated into the Electronic Medical Record as part of standard patient intake procedures. Patients identified as food insecure should be referred to food resources such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly known as food stamps), food pantries, and home-delivered meals.
Tailor dietary recommendations to reflect cultural food habits and budgetary considerations. Cardioprotective dietary patterns can incorporate foods from diverse cultures and food choices . Clinicians should be aware of cultural dynamics, patient food preferences, and access to resources when providing nutritional recommendations.
Utilize literacy-level appropriate, culturally-relevant educational materials. Clinicians should refer to existing resources from health-focused organizations and seek patient feedback in developing culturally-relevant nutrition education materials. (Table 4)

However, notable disparities in dietary behaviors exist among US racial/ethnic groups. Black and Mexican American adults have a higher prevalence of poor heart healthy diet scores as compared with White adults. Culturally relevant nutrition resources should be provided when appropriate (Table 4). Fueled by inequities in food access and socioeconomic resources, racial/ethnic disparities in food insecurity have persisted for decades and been further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Overall, living in food deserts is associated with increased cardiovascular risk factors and preclinical ASCVD, mainly driven by social determinants of health such as income and access to nutritious food.

Table 4. Examples of culturally relevant nutrition resources for ASCVD prevention.

Organization Resource(s) Resource Link
Association of Black Cardiologists Cooking for your Heart and Soul (heart-healthy plant-based recipes) https://abcardio.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/ABC_Cookbook.pdf
Doras Table Easy and Delicious Mexican Vegan Recipes https://dorastable.com
Oldways Traditional food pyramids (African, Latin American, Asian) and recipes Food pyramids: https://oldwayspt.org/traditional-diets Recipes: https://oldwayspt.org/recipes

Practical Tips/Implementations for Clinicians and Patients

While diet-related risk continues to be one of the leading causes of CVD, there is an urgent and unmet need for nutrition-related education at all levels of medical education and clinical practice. Most physicians receive minimal or no training in evidence-based clinical nutrition, which frequently results in physicians not actively engaging in educating their patients. This has a direct and profound effect on disease prevention and clinical outcomes. In a survey of 930 cardiovascular specialists, 90% admitted to receiving minimal or no training in nutrition, and 95% believed that it is their personal responsibility to teach nutrition to their patients. However, only 20% of cardiologists admitted to eating ≥ 5 servings of fruits and vegetables a day.

Most of the current CVD-related conferences in the US offer minimal nutrition-related continuing medical education (CME) programming. In an effort to fill this gap, in 2018, the AHA issued a Scientific Advisory of Medical Nutrition, Training, and Competencies to Advance Guidelines-Based Counselling by Physicians. A recent article titled, A Clinicians Guide to Healthy Eating for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention, outlines practical tips to take evidence based clinical nutrition to day-to-day practice of preventive cardiology. In addition, the two-part series on Trending Cardiovascular Nutrition Controversies is a useful resource for cardiovascular trainees and practitioners.

Currently, there is an increasing trend and demand to include formal culinary training programs at US medical schools. Recently in 2020, the American college of lifestyle medicine has published the first, comprehensive, open-source culinary medicine curriculum for health professional training programs: a global reach. Over the course of the past 10–15 years, the percentage of Americans cooking at home has gradually increased. However, according to the 2021 AHA statistics, the number of adults meeting the Healthy Diet Index for ages 12–19 is 0.0% and for age >19 is 0.3%. This trend provides an opportunity to empower the general population with the information needed to eat healthily, in accordance with the USDA and ACC/AHA guidelines. The American journal of preventive cardiology recently published a practical and implementable outline of 10 dietary strategies for cardiovascular risk reduction. The American society for preventive cardiology (ASPC) supports these recommendations.

Referral to Registered Dietitians

Implementation of a cardioprotective dietary pattern and associated reductions in ASCVD risk factors can be facilitated by nutritional counseling; a substantial body of evidence supports counseling by Registered Dietitians (RDs) as effectively improving diet quality, facilitating intentional weight loss, improving blood glucose, HbA1c, blood lipids and blood pressure. However, insurance and Medicare coverage of dietetic consultations remains variable and often with a limited scope; Medicare Part B coverage for medical nutrition therapy extends only to type 2 diabetes and renal conditions. Providers should be encouraged to refer patients to RDs for medical nutrition interventions when appropriate, and advocate for expanded coverage of medical nutrition therapy. Existing proposed legislation aims to broadly expand medical nutrition therapy coverage for various ASCVD risk factors including obesity, prediabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia and other cardiovascular diseases, and stands to broadly expand access to preventive nutrition services.

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