Lifestyle scienceLifestyle scienceEvidence Tier I

Mediterranean diet and longevity: the most evidence-grounded dietary pattern in medicine

No dietary pattern has more RCT evidence for longevity than the Mediterranean diet. The PREDIMED trial — 7,447 participants, 5 years — showed a 30% reduction in major cardiovascular events. Here is what the evidence actually supports.

Dr. Sofia Marchetti, PhD
April 28, 2026
2 min read

What the Mediterranean diet actually is

The Mediterranean diet is not a single diet — it is a dietary pattern observed in populations living around the Mediterranean Sea in the 1950s–1960s, before industrialised food systems transformed their eating habits. Its defining features are: high consumption of vegetables, legumes, fruits, nuts, and whole grains; olive oil as the primary fat source; moderate fish and seafood consumption; low-to-moderate dairy; low red meat; and moderate wine consumption with meals. It is not a low-fat diet — fat from olive oil and nuts can constitute 35–40% of total calories.

The PREDIMED trial

PREDIMED (Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea) is the largest randomised controlled trial of dietary intervention for cardiovascular outcomes ever conducted. 7,447 high-risk adults were randomised to one of three groups: Mediterranean diet supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO), Mediterranean diet supplemented with mixed nuts, or a low-fat control diet. After a median follow-up of 4.8 years, both Mediterranean diet groups showed a 30% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events (myocardial infarction, stroke, cardiovascular death) compared to the control group. The trial was stopped early because the benefit was so clear that continuing the control arm was considered unethical.

Key finding

The Mediterranean diet reduces major cardiovascular events by 30% in high-risk adults — an effect size larger than most pharmaceutical interventions for primary prevention. The benefit was driven primarily by olive oil and nut consumption.

Mechanisms

  • Anti-inflammatory: polyphenols in olive oil (oleocanthal), nuts, and vegetables suppress NF-κB signalling and reduce circulating inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6, TNF-α).
  • Epigenetic: Mediterranean diet adherence is associated with slower epigenetic clock aging in multiple studies, including a 2020 analysis of the PREDIMED cohort.
  • Microbiome: the high fibre and polyphenol content selectively feeds beneficial bacteria (Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, Akkermansia) and increases SCFA production.
  • Metabolic: replaces saturated fat with monounsaturated fat (oleic acid), improving LDL particle size and reducing postprandial inflammation.

The practical protocol

  • Use extra-virgin olive oil as your primary cooking fat. Aim for 4+ tablespoons per day — the dose used in PREDIMED.
  • Eat legumes (lentils, chickpeas, beans) at least 3× per week. They are the single food most consistently associated with longevity across Blue Zones populations.
  • Eat 30g of mixed nuts daily (walnuts, almonds, hazelnuts). The PREDIMED nut group showed the same 30% cardiovascular risk reduction as the EVOO group.
  • Eat fish 2–3× per week, prioritising oily fish (sardines, mackerel, salmon, anchovies) for omega-3 content.
  • Minimise ultra-processed food, refined grains, and added sugar — these are the primary departures from the traditional Mediterranean pattern.

Vitaei verdict

The Mediterranean diet has more RCT evidence for longevity than any other dietary pattern. The key active components are extra-virgin olive oil, nuts, legumes, and vegetables. It is not about restriction — it is about substitution: replacing ultra-processed food and refined grains with whole, minimally processed foods rich in polyphenols and fibre.