Dietary Patterns and Risk of Incident Type 2 Diabetes in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis
- Jennifer A. Nettleton, PhD (jennifer.a.nettleton{at}uth.tmc.edu),
- Lyn M. Steffen, PhD,MPH,RD,
- Hanyu Ni, PhD,MPH,
- Kiang Liu, PhD and
- David R. Jacobs, Jr., PhD
- From the Division of Epidemiology and Disease Control, University of Texas Health Sciences Center, Houston, TX (JAN), Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN (LMS, DRJ); Department of Nutrition, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway (DRJ); Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL (KL); and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD (HN)
Abstract
Objective: We characterized dietary patterns and their relation to incident type 2 diabetes in 5,011 participants from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis.
Research Design and Methods: White, Black, Hispanic, and Chinese adults, aged 45-84 years and free of CVD and diabetes, completed food frequency questionnaires at baseline (2000-2002). Incident type 2 diabetes was defined at three follow-up exams (2002-03, 2004-05, 2005-07) as fasting glucose >126 mg/dL, self-reported type 2 diabetes, or use of diabetes medication. Two types of dietary patterns were studied: four empirically-derived (principal components analysis) and one author-defined (“low-risk food pattern”) as the weighted sum of whole grains, vegetables, nuts/seeds, low-fat dairy, coffee (positively weighted), red meat, processed meat, high-fat dairy, and soda (negatively weighted).
Results: The empirically-derived dietary pattern characterized by high intake of tomatoes, beans, refined grains, high-fat dairy, and red meat was associated with an 18% greater risk (HR [95%CI] per 1-score SD: 1.18 [1.06, 1.32], ptrend =0.004 ), whereas the empirically-derived dietary pattern characterized by high intake of whole grains, fruit, nuts/seeds, green leafy vegetables, and low-fat dairy was associated with a 15% lower diabetes risk (HR [95%CI] per 1-score SD: 0.85 [0.76, 0.95], ptrend =0.005). The “low-risk food pattern” was also inversely associated with diabetes risk (HR [95%CI] per 1-score SD: 0.87 [0.81, 0.99], ptrend =0.04). Individual component food groups were not independently associated with diabetes risk. Associations were not modified by sex or race/ethnicity.
Conclusions: Multiple food groups collectively influence type 2 diabetes risk beyond that of the individual food groups themselves.
Footnotes
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- Received April 21, 2008.
- Accepted May 23, 2008.
- Copyright © American Diabetes Association














