Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
National Food Institute, Division for Diet, Disease Prevention and Toxicology, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.
J Nutr. 2021 May 11;151(5):1241-1248. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxaa448.
Few cohort studies have modelled replacements of red meat with other sources of protein on subsequent risk of type 2 diabetes using dietary changes.
To determine whether replacing red meat with other food sources of protein is associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes.
We used data from the Danish Diet, Cancer, and Health cohort (n = 39,437) of middle-aged (55-72 years old) men and women who underwent 2 dietary assessments roughly 5 years apart to investigate dietary changes. The pseudo-observation method was used to model the average exposure effect of decreasing the intake of red meat while increasing the intake of either poultry, fish, eggs, milk, yogurt, cheese, whole grains, or refined grains on the subsequent 10-year risk of developing type 2 diabetes, compared with no changes in the intakes of these foods.
Replacing 1 serving/day (100 g/day) of red meat with 1 serving/day of eggs [risk difference (RD), -2.7%; 95% CI: -4.0 to -1.1%; serving size: 50 g/day], milk (RD, -1.2%; 95% CI: -2.1 to -0.4%; 200 g/day), yogurt (RD, -1.5%; 95% CI: -2.4 to -0.7%; 70 g/day), whole grains (RD, -1.7%; 95% CI: -2.5 to -0.9%; 30 g/day), or refined grains (RD, -1.2%; 95% CI: -2.0 to -0.3%; 30 g/day) was associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes. Analyses of replacements with poultry or cheese, but not fish, also suggested a lower risk, but with wide CIs. After further adjustment for potential mediators (BMI, waist circumference, and history of hypertension or hypercholesterolemia), only the replacement with eggs was associated with a reduced risk (RD, -1.7%; 95% CI: -3.0 to -0.5%; 50 g/day).
Replacing red meat with eggs in middle-aged adults may reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes. In models not adjusted for potential mediators, replacing red meat with milk, yogurt, whole grains, or refined grains was also associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes.
很少有队列研究使用饮食变化来模拟用其他蛋白质来源替代红肉对 2 型糖尿病后续风险的影响。
确定用其他食物来源的蛋白质替代红肉是否与 2 型糖尿病风险降低有关。
我们使用丹麦饮食、癌症和健康队列(n=39437)中年(55-72 岁)男性和女性的两次饮食评估数据,这些人大约相隔 5 年进行了两次饮食评估,以调查饮食变化。使用伪观察法模拟减少摄入红肉,同时增加摄入禽肉、鱼类、鸡蛋、牛奶、酸奶、奶酪、全谷物或精制谷物对随后 10 年发生 2 型糖尿病风险的平均暴露效应,与这些食物摄入量没有变化相比。
用 1 份/天(100g/天)鸡蛋(风险差异[RD],-2.7%;95%CI:-4.0 至-1.1%;食用份量:50g/天)、牛奶(RD,-1.2%;95%CI:-2.1 至-0.4%;200g/天)、酸奶(RD,-1.5%;95%CI:-2.4 至-0.7%;70g/天)、全谷物(RD,-1.7%;95%CI:-2.5 至-0.9%;30g/天)或精制谷物(RD,-1.2%;95%CI:-2.0 至-0.3%;30g/天)替代 1 份/天的红肉与 2 型糖尿病风险降低相关。用禽肉或奶酪替代,而不是鱼类替代,也提示风险降低,但置信区间较宽。进一步调整潜在中介物(BMI、腰围和高血压或高胆固醇血症史)后,只有用鸡蛋替代与降低风险相关(RD,-1.7%;95%CI:-3.0 至-0.5%;50g/天)。
在中年成年人中用鸡蛋替代红肉可能会降低 2 型糖尿病的风险。在未调整潜在中介物的模型中,用牛奶、酸奶、全谷物或精制谷物替代红肉也与 2 型糖尿病风险降低相关。