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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Department of Epidemiology, German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke, Nuthetal, Germany (MBS, KH, CW, and CH); the Division of Preventive Medicine (JEM) and the Channing Laboratory (JEM, WCW, GAC, and FBH), Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; the Departments of Epidemiology (JEM, WCW, GAC, and FBH) and Nutrition (WCW and FBH), Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA; and the General Medicine Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA (JBM)
2 Supported by research grants (CA50385, CA87969, HL60712, and DK58845) from the National Institutes of Health. MBS is supported by a grant from the Deutsche Krebshilfe. JBM is supported in part by an American Diabetes Association Career Development Award. FBH is the recipient of an American Heart Association Established Investigator Award.
3 Reprints not available. Address correspondence to MB Schulze, German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke, Department of Epidemiology, Arthur-Scheunert-Allee 114-116, 14558 Nuthetal, Germany. E-mail: mschulze{at}mail.dife.de.
See corresponding CME exam on page 714.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: Our objective was to investigate the relation between a dietary pattern associated with biomarkers of inflammation and the incidence of type 2 diabetes.
Design: We conducted a nested case-control study of 656 cases of type 2 diabetes and 694 controls among women in the Nurses' Health Study and 2 prospective cohort studies of 35 340 women in the Nurses' Health Study and 89 311 women in the Nurses' Health Study II who were followed for incident diabetes.
Results: Through the use of reduced rank regression, we identified a dietary pattern that was strongly related to inflammatory markers in the nested case-control study. This pattern, which was high in sugar-sweetened soft drinks, refined grains, diet soft drinks, and processed meat but low in wine, coffee, cruciferous vegetables, and yellow vegetables, was associated with an increased risk of diabetes (multivariate-adjusted odds ratio comparing extreme quintiles: 3.09; 95% CI: 1.99, 4.79). We identified 1517 incident cases of confirmed type 2 diabetes in the Nurses' Health Study (458 991 person-years) and 724 incident cases in the Nurses' Health Study II (701 155 person-years). After adjustment for body mass index and other potential lifestyle confounders, the relative risks comparing extreme quintiles of the pattern were 2.56 (95% CI: 2.10, 3.12; P for trend < 0.001) in the Nurses' Health Study and 2.93 (95% CI: 2.18, 3.92; P for trend < 0.001) in the Nurses' Health Study II.
Conclusion: The dietary pattern identified may increase chronic inflammation and raise the risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
Key Words: Body mass index diet pattern incidence inflammation non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus type 2 diabetes prospective studies questionnaires reduced rank regression risk factors
| INTRODUCTION |
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| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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Among those NHS participants who did not provide blood, 51 895 women completed a dietary questionnaire in 1984. After the exclusion of women with a history of diabetes, cancer (except nonmelanoma skin cancer), or cardiovascular disease; with implausible energy intakes (eg, <500 or >3500 kcal/d); or without information on physical activity or body weight, 35 340 women remained for cohort analyses separate from the nested case-control analysis.
The Nurses' Health Study II (NHS-II) is a prospective cohort study of 116 671 female US nurses. Participants were aged 2444 y at the study start in 1989. As with the NHS cohort, the NHS-II cohort is followed up through the use of biennial mailed questionnaires. The follow-up rate exceeds 90% for every 2-y period, and we estimate nearly complete (98%) ascertainment of mortality. For the analyses presented here, women were excluded from the baseline population if they did not complete a dietary questionnaire in 1991; if the reported dietary intake was implausible with regard to total energy intake; if they had a history of diabetes, cancer (except nonmelanoma skin cancer), or cardiovascular disease reported on either the 1989 or 1991 questionnaire; or if they had not provided data on body weight and physical activity in 1991. These exclusions left a total of 89 311 women for the analyses.
Both studies were approved by the Human Research Committees at the Harvard School of Public Health and the Brigham and Women's Hospital. Completion of the self-administered questionnaire was considered to imply informed consent.
Dietary assessment
Dietary intake information was collected through semiquantitative food-frequency questionnaires (FFQs). Women were asked how often they had consumed a commonly used unit or portion size of each food on average during the previous year, with 9 possible frequency responses ranging from "never" to "more than 6 times a day." For this analysis, we used information collected through the 1984, 1986, 1990, and 1994 FFQs in the NHS and the 1991 and 1995 FFQs in the NHS-II, respectively. Foods were classified into 39 food groups on the basis of nutrient profiles and culinary usage (12). Nutrient intakes were computed by multiplying the frequency response by the nutrient content of the specified portion sizes. Values for nutrients were derived from US Department of Agriculture sources (13) supplemented with information from manufacturers and biochemical analyses at Harvard School of Public Health. Intakes of cereal fiber, magnesium, and caffeine and the glycemic index were energy adjusted by using the residuals method (14). Intakes of carbohydrates and trans fatty acids were expressed as nutrient density (% of total energy intake) (14). The validity and reliability of the FFQ used in the NHS have been described elsewhere (15, 16). Briefly, the mean correlation coefficient between frequencies of intake of 55 foods from 2 FFQs administered 12 mo apart was 0.57, and the mean corrected correlation coefficient between dietary records and a subsequent FFQ was 0.66 in the NHS (15).
Ascertainment of type 2 diabetes
Women reporting a new diagnosis of diabetes on any of the biennial questionnaires were sent supplementary questionnaires asking about diagnostic tests and treatment of their diabetes and history of ketoacidosis or ketosis to distinguish between type 1 and type 2 diabetes. In accordance with the criteria of the National Diabetes Data Group (17), confirmation of diabetes required at least one of the following: 1) an elevated plasma glucose concentration [fasting plasma glucose
7.8 mmol/L (140 mg/dL), random plasma glucose
11.1 mmol/L (200 mg/dL), or plasma glucose
11.1 mmol/L (200 mg/dL) after
2 h during an oral-glucose-tolerance test] plus at least one classic symptom (excessive thirst, polyuria, weight loss, or hunger); 2) no symptoms, but at least 2 elevated plasma glucose concentrations (by the above criteria) on different occasions; or 3) treatment with hypoglycemic medication (insulin or oral hypoglycemic agent). The diagnostic criteria for type 2 diabetes were changed in 1997 (18) such that lower fasting glucose levels (
7 mmol/L, or 126 mg/dL) would now be considered diagnostic. Thus, we used the American Diabetes Association criteria for diagnosis of diabetes after 1998. In a substudy of the NHS, 98% of the self-reported diabetes cases documented by the same supplementary questionnaire were confirmed by medical record review (19, 20).
Assessment of nondietary exposures
Information on age, weight, smoking status, contraceptive use, and postmenopausal hormone therapy was collected through biennial questionnaires. We calculated BMI as the ratio of weight (in kg) to squared height (in m2), the latter being assessed at baseline only. Self-reports of body weight have been highly correlated with technician-measured weights (r = 0.96) in the NHS (21). Waist and hip circumferences were self-reported in 1986 and 1996 in the NHS and in 1993 in the NHS-II. Physical activity, assessed in 1986, 1988, 1992, 1994, and 1996 in the NHS and in 1991 and 1997 in the NHS-II, was computed as metabolic equivalents (MET) per week by using the duration per week of various forms of exercise, with each activity weighted by its intensity level. Physical activity reported on the questionnaire was highly correlated with activity recorded in diaries or by 24-h recall in the NHS-II (0.79 and 0.62) (22).
Laboratory procedures
Women in the NHS willing to provide blood specimens were sent instructions and a phlebotomy kit (including sodium heparin blood tubes, needles, and a tourniquet). Blood specimens were returned by overnight mail in a frozen water bottle. On arrival, the samples were centrifuged to separate plasma from the buffy coat and red cells and were frozen in liquid nitrogen until analyzed. Ninety-seven percent of samples arrived within 26 h of phlebotomy.
Frozen plasma samples from case and control subjects were selected for simultaneous analysis. C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations were measured by use of a high-sensitivity latex-enhanced immunonephelometric assay on a BN II analyzer (Dade Behring, Newark, DE). Interleukin 6 (IL-6) was measured by a quantitative sandwich enzyme immunoassay technique (Quantikine HS Immunoassay kit; R&D Systems, Minneapolis), and plasma concentrations of soluble fractions of tumor necrosis factor
receptor 2 (sTNFR2) were measured by use of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit using immobilized monoclonal antibody to human sTNFR2 (Genzyme, Cambridge, MA). Concentrations of E-selectin, soluble intracellular cell adhesion molecule 1 (sICAM-1), and soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (sVCAM-1) were measured by commercial ELISA (R & D Systems). The interassay CVs for each analyte were as follows: 3.43.8% for CRP, 5.88.2% for IL-6, 6.2% for sTNFR2, 6.46.6% for E-selectin, 6.110.1% for sICAM-1, and 8.510.2% for sVCAM-1.
Statistical analysis
In the nested case-control sample of the NHS, we calculated the mean intake from the 1986 and 1990 FFQs for the 39 food groups to reduce within-subject variation and best represent long-term diet (23). We subsequently applied reduced rank regression (RRR) to derive a dietary pattern predictive of diabetes risk. RRR identifies linear functions of predictors (eg, food groups) that explain as much response (eg, biomarker) variation as possible. RRR can be interpreted as a principal component analysis applied to responses and a subsequent linear regression of principal components on predictors, although it is somewhat more sophisticated and efficient than this 2-step procedure. Thus, we calculated linear functions of food group intake (dietary patterns) that explain as much variation in inflammatory biomarkers as possible. The first factor obtained by RRR was retained for subsequent analyses because it explains the largest amount of variation among the biomarkers. A more detailed description of the method, including the SAS code and its application in nutritional epidemiology, can be found elsewhere (24). Results of the RRR analysis based on food intakes expressed as energy densities were similar and are not reported here.
Pearson correlation coefficients were used to evaluate associations between the derived pattern and inflammatory biomarkers in the nested case-control sample of the NHS. We divided the distributions of the derived dietary pattern into quintiles based on the control subjects and calculated the geometric mean biomarker concentrations across pattern quintiles with adjustment for anthropometric and lifestyle characteristics. We used unconditional logistic regression models to estimate the odds ratio (OR) of diabetes in each quintile by using the lowest quintile as the reference category and to estimate the significance of trend in ORs across increasing biomarker quintiles. Multivariate models were adjusted for age (5-y groups), BMI (<21.0, 21.022.9, 23.024.9, 25.026.9, 27.028.9, 29.030.9, 31.032.9, 33.034.9, and
35.0), physical activity (MET score in quintiles), family history of diabetes in a first-degree relative (yes or no), smoking (missing, never, past, or current), postmenopausal hormone use (missing, never, or ever), total energy intake (quintiles), and fasting status. The results of conditional logistic regression with conditioning on matching factors, such as age, fasting status, and race, were similar to the unconditional regression models and are not reported here.
To cross-validate the results from the nested case-control study, we first identified the important component foods of the RRR pattern by stepwise linear regression with a significance level of P < 0.05 for entry into and staying in the model with the biomarker response score as the dependent variable and food groups as independent variables. A diet pattern score was then calculated among women in the NHS who did not provide blood as well as in the NHS-II as the linear combination of these standardized component food items (25). We estimated the relative risk (RR) for each quintile of pattern score compared with the lowest quintile by using Cox proportional hazards analysis stratified by 5-y age categories and 2-y intervals. Duration of follow-up was calculated as the interval between the return of the 1984 questionnaire (NHS) and the 1991 questionnaire (NHS-II), respectively, and the diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2), death, or June 1, 1998 (NHS) or 1999 (NHS-II), respectively. We cumulatively updated food intake information with subsequent questionnaires, except for those individuals who reported a diagnosis of cancer (except nonmelanoma skin cancer) or cardiovascular disease during follow-up, because changes in diet after development of these conditions may confound the relation between dietary intake and diabetes (23).
We used information on covariates obtained from the baseline or subsequent questionnaires in multivariate analyses, including BMI (9 categories), physical activity (MET score in quintiles), family history of diabetes in a first-degree relative (yes or no), smoking (missing, never, past, or current), postmenopausal hormone use (missing, never, or ever), and total energy intake (quintiles). We further adjusted for nutrient intake, in particular, magnesium intake (quintiles), caffeine intake (quintiles), cereal fiber intake (quintiles), trans fatty acid intake (quintiles), alcohol intake (0, 0.14.9, 5.09.9, and
10 g/d), the glycemic index (quintiles), and the ratio of polyunsaturated to saturated fat (quintiles) to evaluate whether these nutrients may mediate the dietary patterndisease association. Nondietary covariates were updated during follow-up by using the most recent data for each 2-y follow-up interval. The significance of linear trends across quintiles of the pattern score was tested by assigning each participant the median value for the quintile and modeling this value as a continuous variable. We also tested for effect modification by BMI, physical activity, and family history of diabetes by performing analyses stratified by these variables and by evaluating interaction terms. All statistical analyses were performed by using SAS statistical software (version 8.0; SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC).
| RESULTS |
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± SD: 12.0 ± 14.8 METs) and had greater BMIs (
± SD: 30.2 ± 5.6) at baseline than did women who remained diabetes free (15.8 ± 28.1 METs; BMI: 26.1 ± 5.1). The age of the participants did not differ significantly between the cases and the controls (
± SD: 56.2 ± 6.9 y; range: 4369 y). In addition, although the proportion of ex-smokers (41.1% and 42.4%) and current smokers (13.4% and 13.2%) did not differ significantly between the cases and the controls, women who developed diabetes were more likely to have had a family relative with a history of diabetes (47.6% compared with 20.8%).
We identified a dietary pattern with the RRR method that was positively correlated with all inflammatory biomarkers (Table 1
). Correlation coefficients ranged from 0.12 for sTNFR2 to 0.26 for E-selectin. The pattern represented a diet relatively high in sugar-sweetened soft drinks, refined grains, diet soft drinks, processed meat, and "other vegetables" (other than yellow, cruciferous, and green-leafy vegetables, tomatoes, and legumes) but low in wine, coffee, cruciferous vegetables, and yellow vegetables. These food groups, with the exception of other vegetables, were significantly correlated with at least one inflammatory marker.
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To validate the results in the 2 independent cohorts, we first identified food groups significantly explaining variation in biomarker levels in the nested case-control study by stepwise linear regression (positive association: sugar-sweetened soft drinks, refined grains, diet soft drinks, processed meat, and other vegetables; negative association: wine, coffee, cruciferous vegetables, and yellow vegetables). We next calculated pattern scores among participants in the NHS who did not provide blood and in the NHS-II cohort on the basis of these food groups. The simplified diet pattern score had a correlation coefficient of 0.75 with the original RRR pattern score in the nested case-control study in the NHS and thus reflected a dietary pattern similar to the one identified with the RRR method.
In both the NHS and the NHS-II, the pattern score was associated with increasing BMI and lower age and physical activity at baseline in 1984 and 1991, respectively (Table 3
). Also, women with a higher pattern score were more likely to have a family history of diabetes. The dietary pattern represented a diet relatively high in trans fat and with a high glycemic index but low in alcohol, magnesium, caffeine, and cereal fiber and with a low ratio of polyunsaturated to saturated fat.
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24), history of diabetes in a first-degree relative, and physical activity (Table 4
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27; RR for extreme quintiles: 3.15) than among women with low BMI (RR: 1.93; P for interaction: 0.02). We additionally adjusted for the waist-to-hip ratio in a separate analysis among 42 967 women (273 cases) who reported their waist and hip circumferences in 1993, but the pattern remained significantly associated with an increased diabetes risk (RR for extreme quintiles: 2.37; 95% CI: 1.48, 3.79). | DISCUSSION |
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The pattern we identified was characterized by high intakes of sugar-sweetened soft drinks, refined grains, diet soft drinks, processed meat, and low intakes of wine, coffee, cruciferous vegetables, and yellow vegetables. Other vegetables (celery, mushrooms, green pepper, corn, mixed vegetables, eggplant, and summer squash) were not correlated with inflammation and were only moderately associated with the pattern; thus, the contribution of this food group to the overall pattern was negligible. Most of these food groups have been identified to be associated with diabetes risk in previous studies and some have also been found to be associated with inflammatory markers. Moderate alcohol consumption (13 drinks/d) has been consistently associated with lower incidence of diabetes (26) and lower levels of pro-inflammatory markers (2732). An inverse association between coffee consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes was observed in several prospective cohort studies (3336). Sugar-sweetened beverages have been associated with risk of diabetes among women (37); these beverages contribute importantly to glycemic load, which has been associated with inflammatory markers (38). Several epidemiologic studies found that diets rich in whole grains compared with refined grains may protect against type 2 diabetes (3943). Refined grains may be associated with increased diabetes risk because these foods tend to be low in cereal fiber and have a high glycemic index, which both appear to be associated with increased diabetes risk (4). Other components of whole grains may also have beneficial effects, with isoflavones being potentially associated with decreased inflammation (44). Frequent consumption of meat, in particular processed meat, has been consistently shown to increase the risk of diabetes in prospective studies (6, 4547). Advanced glycation end products, which are high in processed animal foods high in protein and fat, have been found to promote inflammatory mediators in humans (48). Vegetable consumption was inversely associated with risk of diabetes in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (49) and in a Finnish cohort study (50) but not among older women in the Iowa Women's Health Study (41). The effects of vegetable consumption on inflammatory processes are largely unknown. A cross-sectional study of the elderly observed lower concentrations of CRP with higher fruit and vegetable consumption, although this study did not provide estimates for vegetables alone or for specific subgroups of vegetables (51). In a recent trial over a 2-y period among men and women with the metabolic syndrome, increased consumption of fruit, vegetables, walnuts, whole grains, and olive oil significantly reduced concentrations of CRP, IL-6, IL-7, and IL-18 and improved endothelial function compared with that in a control group that consumed an otherwise healthy diet (<30% fat, <10% saturated fat) (52). These effects were attenuated but not eliminated by additional adjustment for weight change over the course of the study.
Recently, we reported the role of overall dietary patterns derived by using factor analysis in predicting the risk of diabetes in 2 cohort studies (5, 6). A prudent pattern (characterized by a high consumption of vegetables, fruit, fish, poultry, and whole grains) was associated with a modest nonsignificant risk reduction in both studies, whereas a Western pattern (characterized by a high consumption of red meat, processed meat, French fries, high-fat dairy products, refined grains, and sweets and desserts) was associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes. Here, the multivariate RR for extreme quintiles was 1.49 (95% CI: 1.26, 1.76) in the NHS (6) and 1.59 (95% CI: 1.32, 1.93) in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study (5). The prudent pattern was inversely associated with plasma concentrations of CRP and E-selectin, and the Western pattern showed a positive relation with CRP, E-selectin, sICAM-1, and sVCAM-1 after adjustment for age, BMI, physical activity, smoking status, and alcohol consumption in the NHS among control women of the same nested case-control study used in our analysis (10). In addition, the Western pattern was significantly correlated with CRP in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study after adjustment for a variety of risk factors but not after adjustment for BMI (9). In a recent study of 4304 Finnish men and women, a prudent pattern (characterized by higher consumption of fruit and vegetables) was significantly associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes, whereas a "conservative" pattern (characterized by consumption of butter, potatoes, and whole milk) was significantly associated with an increased risk (7).
In contrast with our previous analyses and the Finnish study, which derived the dietary patterns by using factor analysis based on the observed covariance among food groups, the present study used the information on inflammatory biomarkers to derive the dietary pattern. The advantage of this approach as opposed to the factor analysis approach is that the derived dietary pattern incorporates information on biological pathways and thus is hypothesis-driven instead of being driven by patterns of eating behavior and could be more predictive of disease risk. Using the same technique, we previously identified a dietary pattern in the prospective EPIC-Potsdam cohort that was characterized by a high intake of fresh fruit and a low intake of sugar-sweetened beverages, beer, meat, poultry, processed meat, legumes, and bread, excluding whole-grain bread (8). Subjects who scored high had high plasma concentrations of HDL cholesterol and adiponectin and low plasma concentrations of glycated hemoglobin. After multivariate adjustment, the RR for type 2 diabetes mellitus for extreme quintiles of the dietary pattern score was 0.27 (95% CI: 0.13, 0.64; P for trend < 0.001). However, the pattern was not significantly associated with CRP concentrations, and we were not able to verify these results in independent study samples, as we did in the present study.
The current RRR approach requires response (biomarker) information. This information may not be available in many studies otherwise suitable for evaluating diet-disease associations. Also, the biomarker information available may not reflect the current state of knowledge. In our study, we selected inflammatory markers that previously predicted risk of diabetes in the same cohort (53, 54). However, pathways other than inflammation may also be relevant in the development of diabetes. For example, we observed significant associations between markers of body iron stores (55) and ß cell function (56) and risk of diabetes in the NHS, but did not consider these markers in the present analysis for 2 reasons. First, measures of body iron stores were only weakly correlated with inflammatory markers, which limits the usefulness of their additional inclusion in the RRR analysis. Second, ß cell function was not measured in a large proportion of the current sample. Although this narrows potential effects of diet on diabetes risk to a single pathway, previous RRR analyses suggest that one single dietary pattern is unlikely to explain several different and independent pathways (8, 57). It might be of interest to evaluate whether other biomarkers play a role in mediating effects of the dietary pattern on inflammatory markers, for example, lipoproteins. Unfortunately, we did not have lipoprotein markers available for our nested case-control study population.
Obesity induces a state of chronic low-grade inflammation (58), and excess body fat may therefore also explain associations between those food groups identified to be components of the dietary pattern and inflammatory markers. For example, diet soft drinks were directly associated with BMI cross-sectionally in the NHS-II (37), although this association most likely represents a reverse causation because the use of diet soft drinks instead of regular soft drinks is the most frequently reported diet intervention to lose weight in US adults (59). Although diet soft drinks were identified as a component of the RRR pattern, associations between diet soft drinks and inflammatory markers may be confounded by BMI. With use of the BMI-adjusted biomarker levels as responses in RRR, the pattern remained similar with sugar-sweetened beverages and refined grains being positively associated with the pattern and wine, coffee, and cruciferous vegetables being negatively associated. However, diet soft drinks were no longer an important component of the pattern. Adjustment for BMI also partly attenuated the age-adjusted associations between the dietary pattern and risk of diabetes. However, it is also possible that weight gain is one potential pathway by which the dietary pattern is associated with inflammation and diabetes risk. Adjustment for BMI may therefore lead to an underestimation of the true effect of the diet. To determine whether BMI is a confounder or mediator is not possible with our study design, because associations between the dietary pattern, BMI, and inflammatory markers were analyzed cross-sectionally. Nevertheless, component foods such as sugar-sweetened soft drinks, refined grains, wine, coffee, and vegetables appear to relate to inflammatory markers independent of BMI, and the association between the dietary pattern and diabetes risk remained strong after adjustment for BMI and the waist-to-hip ratio. Our data also suggest that the diet pattern score may be more strongly associated with diabetes risk among obese women than among lean women.
The repeated dietary measurements used in this study were advantageous because they dampened measurement errors and took into account changes in eating behaviors over time (23). Compared with the traditional approach of examining the effects of individual nutrients or foods, the dietary pattern approach has the advantage of representing the cumulative effects of overall diet.
The NHS and NHS-II cohorts are study populations of US female nurses and therefore are not representative of the general US female population. Thus, our results should be replicated in other populations. Another potential limitation of our study is the reliance on self-reported confounder information. For example, smoking has been related to inflammation (60) and diabetes risk (4), and smoking cessation has effects on body weight (61). Because smoking and poor diet may also be part of an unhealthy lifestyle, residual confounding due to measurement error in assessing smoking history or due to insufficient control in statistical models might have biased our observations, but it is unlikely that such a bias would explain the strong relation between the dietary pattern and diabetes risk. Similarly, a history of hypertension may influence dietary behavior and is associated with inflammation (62). Although adjustment for hypertension did not alter our observations, residual confounding might still be present.
In conclusion, our data suggest that a diet high in sugar-sweetened soft drinks, refined grains, diet soft drinks, and processed meat and low in wine, coffee, cruciferous vegetables, and yellow vegetables may increase the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, possibly by exacerbating inflammatory processes.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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