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含糖苏打水消费增加墨西哥女性患糖尿病风险。

Sugar-Sweetened Soda Consumption Increases Diabetes Risk Among Mexican Women.

机构信息

CONACyT - Center for Research on Population Health, National Institute of Public Health, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

Center for Research on Nutrition and Health, National Institute of Public Health, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

出版信息

J Nutr. 2019 May 1;149(5):795-803. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxy298.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Epidemiological evidence supports an association between sugar-sweetened soda consumption and diabetes. However, evidence regarding this association is limited in countries that have recently undergone a nutritional transition.

OBJECTIVE

We estimated the association between sugar-sweetened soda consumption and incident diabetes. We also determined if the association between sugar-sweetened soda and diabetes differs as a result of early life factors and potential genetic susceptibility.

METHODS

We used data from the Mexican Teachers' Cohort including 72,667 women aged ≥25 y, free of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer at baseline. We assessed sugar-sweetened soda consumption using a validated food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) at baseline. Diabetes was self-reported. We used Cox proportional hazard regression models to estimate the association between quintiles of sugar-sweetend soda and diabetes. We also estimated the associaiton by increasing one serving per day (355 mL) of sugar-sweetened soda. We conducted prespecified subgroup analysis by potential effect modifiers, namely markers of energy balance of early life factors, family history of diabetes, and Amerindian admixture.

RESULTS

During a median follow-up of 2.16 y (IQR 0.75-4.50) we identified 3,155 incident cases of diabetes. The median consumption of sugar-sweetened soda was 1.17 servings per day (IQR 0.47- 4.00). In multivariable analyses, comparing extreme quintiles showed that higher sugar-sweetened soda consumption was associated with diabetes incidence (HR = 1.32; 95% CI: 1.17, 1.49), and each additional serving per day of sugar-sweetened soda was associated with an increase of 27% in diabetes incidence (HR = 1.27; 95% CI: 1.16, 1.38). The soda-diabetes association was stronger among women who experienced intrauterine and childhood over-nutrition (high birth weight, no short stature, higher adiposity in premenarche, and higher adiposity at age 18-20 y old).

CONCLUSION

Sugar-sweetened soda consumption is associated with an increased risk of diabetes among Mexican women in a magnitude similar to that reported in other populations. The stronger association among individuals with markers of early life over-nutrition reinforce the need for early life interventions.

摘要

背景

流行病学证据支持糖饮料消费与糖尿病之间存在关联。然而,在最近经历营养转型的国家,有关这种关联的证据有限。

目的

我们估计糖饮料消费与糖尿病发病之间的关联。我们还确定了糖饮料与糖尿病之间的关联是否因生命早期因素和潜在遗传易感性而有所不同。

方法

我们使用了来自墨西哥教师队列的数据,该队列包括 72667 名年龄≥25 岁的女性,基线时无糖尿病、心血管疾病和癌症。我们使用经过验证的食物频率问卷(FFQ)在基线时评估糖饮料的摄入量。糖尿病为自我报告。我们使用 Cox 比例风险回归模型来估计糖饮料摄入量五分位数与糖尿病之间的关联。我们还按每天增加一份(355 毫升)糖饮料的方式来估计关联。我们进行了预先指定的亚组分析,潜在的效应修饰剂包括生命早期能量平衡的标志物、糖尿病家族史和美洲印第安人混血儿。

结果

在中位数为 2.16 年(IQR 0.75-4.50)的随访期间,我们发现了 3155 例糖尿病发病。糖饮料的中位数摄入量为 1.17 份/天(IQR 0.47-4.00)。在多变量分析中,比较极端五分位数表明,较高的糖饮料摄入量与糖尿病发病率有关(HR=1.32;95%CI:1.17,1.49),每天多摄入一份糖饮料与糖尿病发病率增加 27%有关(HR=1.27;95%CI:1.16,1.38)。在经历宫内和儿童时期营养过剩(高出生体重、无身材矮小、青春期前体脂增加和 18-20 岁时体脂增加)的女性中,糖饮料与糖尿病之间的关联更强。

结论

在墨西哥女性中,糖饮料的摄入量与糖尿病的风险增加有关,其程度与其他人群报告的相似。在具有生命早期营养过剩标志物的个体中,这种关联更强,这加强了对生命早期干预的需求。

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