Environmental, Genetic and Nutritional Epidemiology Research Center (CREAGEN), Department of Biomedical, Metabolic and Neural Sciences, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy; Department of Epidemiology, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Environmental, Genetic and Nutritional Epidemiology Research Center (CREAGEN), Department of Biomedical, Metabolic and Neural Sciences, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy.
Environ Res. 2021 Jun;197:111210. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111210. Epub 2021 Apr 22.
Accumulating evidence from both experimental and nonexperimental human studies in the last 15 years indicates that exposure to high levels of the trace element selenium increases the risk of type 2 diabetes. However, the relation of dose to effect is not well understood because randomized controlled trials used only one dose (200 μg/day) of selenium supplementation. While no new trial on this topic has been published since 2018, several nonexperimental studies have appeared. We therefore updated a previous meta-analysis to include recently published observational studies, and incorporated the recently developed one-stage random-effects model to display the dose-response relation between selenium and type 2 diabetes. We retrieved 34 potentially eligible nonexperimental studies on selenium and diabetes risk up to April 15, 2021. The bulk of the evidence indicates a direct relation between blood, dietary and urinary levels of selenium and risk of diabetes, but not with nail selenium, which may be considered a less reliable biomarker. The association was nonlinear, with risk increasing above 80 μg/day of dietary selenium. Whole blood/plasma/serum selenium concentrations of 160 μg/L corresponded to a risk ratio of 1.96 (95% CI 1.27-3.03) compared with a concentration of 90 μg/L (approximately 60 μg of daily selenium intake). The cohort studies, which are less susceptible to reverse causation bias, indicated increased risk for both blood and urine selenium levels and dietary selenium intake, whereas no such pattern emerged from studies relying on nail selenium content. Overall, the nonexperimental studies agree with findings from randomized controlled trials, indicating that moderate to high levels of selenium exposure are associated with increased risk for type 2 diabetes.
在过去的 15 年中,来自实验和非实验性人类研究的大量证据表明,接触高水平的微量元素硒会增加 2 型糖尿病的风险。然而,由于随机对照试验仅使用了一种剂量(200μg/天)的硒补充剂,因此剂量与效果之间的关系尚不清楚。虽然自 2018 年以来,关于这个主题的新试验尚未公布,但已经出现了几项非实验性研究。因此,我们更新了之前的荟萃分析,纳入了最近发表的观察性研究,并采用了新开发的单阶段随机效应模型来显示硒与 2 型糖尿病之间的剂量反应关系。我们检索到截至 2021 年 4 月 15 日与硒和糖尿病风险相关的 34 项潜在合格的非实验性研究。大部分证据表明,血液、饮食和尿液中的硒水平与糖尿病风险之间存在直接关系,但与指甲中的硒水平无关,指甲硒可能被认为是一种不太可靠的生物标志物。这种关联是非线性的,随着饮食中硒的摄入量增加到 80μg/天以上,风险增加。与 90μg/L(约 60μg/天的硒摄入量)相比,全血/血浆/血清硒浓度为 160μg/L 时,风险比为 1.96(95%CI 1.27-3.03)。队列研究受反向因果关系偏倚的影响较小,表明血液和尿液硒水平以及饮食硒摄入均与风险增加有关,而依赖指甲硒含量的研究则没有出现这种模式。总的来说,这些非实验性研究与随机对照试验的结果一致,表明中等至高水平的硒暴露与 2 型糖尿病风险增加有关。