# Dietary Behavior Clustering and Cardiovascular Risk Markers in a Large Population Cohort

**Authors:** Mauro Lombardo, Giovanni Aulisa, Fares M. S. Muthanna, Sercan Karav, Sara Baldelli, Gianluca Tripodi, Gilda Aiello

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu18030533 · Nutrients · 2026-02-05

## TL;DR

This study shows that different eating behaviors are linked to body composition and heart-healthy food choices in a large group of adults.

## Contribution

The study introduces a new method to identify dietary profiles and links them to cardiovascular risk markers using a large population cohort.

## Key findings

- Structured eaters had lower BMI and fat mass compared to disordered eaters.
- Disordered eating was associated with higher BMI, fat mass, and lower heart-healthy diet scores.
- Dose–response analyses confirmed that disordered eating correlates with worse cardiometabolic outcomes.

## Abstract

Background: Eating habits influence cardiometabolic health alongside traditional dietary measures. However, the links between dietary patterns, body composition, and heart-healthy food preferences remain under-explored in large cohorts. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 2461 adults (aged 18 to 75 years) completed an online survey on eating behaviors, food preferences, and lifestyle. Principal component analysis (PCA) of seven behaviors identified dietary profiles. A heart-healthy diet score (range −2 to 10; higher = greater preference for fruit, vegetables, legumes, fish, and less meat/processed meat) was derived from these food preferences. ANOVA and adjusted regressions linked the profiles to BMI, fat mass, waist circumference, and diet score. Results: Four profiles emerged: structured, social, irregular, and disordered eaters. Structured eaters had the lowest BMI (26.8 ± 5.1 kg/m2), lowest fat mass (28.9 ± 9.4%), and highest dietary score (4.73 ± 2.0). Disorganized eaters had the highest BMI (29.0 ± 5.5 kg/m2), the highest fat mass (31.2 ± 8.8%) and the lowest score (3.93 ± 2.0); all p < 0.05. Dose–response analyses confirmed that greater disordered eating (PCA1) was associated with worse outcomes. Conclusions: Dietary profiles are associated with body composition and cardioprotective preferences. Behavioral assessment could refine the identification of cardiometabolic risk and personalize nutrition.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** disordered eating (MESH:D001068)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12899149/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12899149