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Food fix: This diet helps to offset genetic risk for Alzheimer’s, according to new Harvard study

Yet more research shows how the foods you eat could help safeguard your memory.

A groundbreaking study from Harvard, published in Nature Medicine, found that following the much-touted Mediterranean Diet may help lower risk of developing dementia and slow cognitive decline.

At first glance, this may not sound particularly surprising. Afterall, study after study has shown the plant-slant diet provides a myriad of benefits, not only by reducing risk for dementia, but also other Chronic Conditions such as Heart Disease, Cancer, and Diabetes.

In this study, researchers found yet another perk for adhering to a Mediterranean-style diet: its benefits were greatest for people most at risk for Alzheimer’s disease—people with two copies of the APOE4 gene variant, which is thought to heighten risk by 12-fold. (People with one copy of the gene face a 3-4 times higher chance of developing Alzheimer’s.)

“Genetics set the baseline risk, but they are not destiny,” Dong D. Wang, MD, ScD, assistant professor of medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School told Medical News Today.

[Read: What determines longevity? Genetics vs. Lifestyle]

For the study, researchers from Mass General Brigham, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and the Broad Institute tracked the health and diets of two large cohorts over decades: over 4,200 women (from 1989 to 2023) and nearly 1,500 men (from 1993 to 2023) Participants completed repeated food‑frequency questionnaires, provided blood samples to analyze metabolic markers, and underwent genetic testing to determine APOE status. Cognitive decline and dementia onset were tracked over time.

Metabolic pathways at play

According to the researchers, the Mediterranean diet —rich in vegetables, fruits, nuts, whole grains, legumes, fish, and olive oil, and minimal in red and processed meats—appears to influence key metabolic pathways that are important for brain health. They help our bodies process nutrients, modulate inflammation, and maintain neural function—all critical elements in preserving cognition.

“These findings suggest that dietary strategies, specifically the Mediterranean diet, could help reduce the risk of cognitive decline and stave off dementia by broadly influencing key metabolic pathways,” said study first author Yuxi Liu, a research fellow at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a postdoctoral fellow at the Harvard Chan School.

Key takeaways

  • Take comfort in what you can control. While we can’t change our DNA, this research highlights how our everyday choices—like what we eat—can have a meaningful impact on our Longevity.
  • Embrace Mediterranean-style meals. Think leafy salads drizzled with olive oil, whole-grain dishes, nuts for snacks, hearty legumes, and fish a few times a week.
  • This matters most if you carry APOE4—but it helps everyone. Even those without known genetic risk benefit from nourishing, brain-friendly foods.
  • Know the study’s limits. Participants were largely well-educated and of European ancestry. More diverse studies are still needed to confirm the findings across populations.
  • A step toward “precision nutrition.” Using diet tailored to one’s genetic profile could become a future preventive strategy, though routine genetic testing and metabolomics aren’t yet common in medical practice.

In short, while more research is needed, the study provides a ray of hope for fending off a devastating neurodegenerative condition that impacts millions of people and often appears later in life.

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