Consumption of fatty foods and incident type 2 diabetes in populations from eight European countries

B Buijsse, H Boeing, D Drogan, MB Schulze…�- European journal of�…, 2015 - nature.com
B Buijsse, H Boeing, D Drogan, MB Schulze, EJ Feskens, P Amiano, A Barricarte…
European journal of clinical nutrition, 2015nature.com
Results: After adjustment not including body mass index (BMI), nonconsumers of butter, nuts
and seeds and cakes and cookies were at higher T2D risk compared with the middle tertile
of consumption. Among consumers, cakes and cookies were inversely related to T2D (HRs
across increasing tertiles 1.14, 1.00 and 0.92, respectively; P-trend< 0.0001). All these
associations attenuated upon adjustment for BMI, except the higher risk of nonconsumers of
cakes and cookies (HR 1.57). Higher consumption of margarine became positively�…
Results:
After adjustment not including body mass index (BMI), nonconsumers of butter, nuts and seeds and cakes and cookies were at higher T2D risk compared with the middle tertile of consumption. Among consumers, cakes and cookies were inversely related to T2D (HRs across increasing tertiles 1.14, 1.00 and 0.92, respectively; P-trend< 0.0001). All these associations attenuated upon adjustment for BMI, except the higher risk of nonconsumers of cakes and cookies (HR 1.57). Higher consumption of margarine became positively associated after BMI adjustment (HRs across increasing consumption tertiles: 0.93, 1.00 and 1.12; P-trend 0.03). Within consumers, vegetable oil, butter and nuts and seeds were unrelated to T2D.
Conclusions:
Fatty foods were generally not associated with T2D, apart from weak positive association for margarine. The higher risk among nonconsumers of cakes and cookies needs further explanation.
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