| Literature DB >> 25383255 |
Nita G Forouhi1, Nicholas J Wareham1.
Abstract
The rising prevalence of type 2 diabetes around the world and the global pattern of variation in risk between countries have been widely attributed to an interplay between rising rates of obesity and poor lifestyles, and genetic or developmental susceptibility to disease. Although this general hypothesis has been in existence for more than 50 years, the precise mechanisms that may explain it have remained uncertain. Advances in technology and the application of new methods in large scale population studies have made it possible to study these mechanisms. The InterAct project, funded by the European Commission, is a large case-cohort study which has verified 12,403 incident cases of type 2 diabetes, facilitating the study of genetic and lifestyle factors on the risk of type 2 diabetes among European populations.Entities:
Keywords: Aetiology; Diet; Gene-lifestyle interaction; Genetic factors; Nutritional biomarker; Physical activity; Prevalence; Prevention; Type 2 diabetes
Year: 2014 PMID: 25383255 PMCID: PMC4218968 DOI: 10.1007/s13668-014-0098-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Nutr Rep ISSN: 2161-3311
Fig. 1Hazard ratios and 95 % CIs for associations between plasma phospholipid saturated fatty acids and incident type 2 diabetes in EPIC-InterAct. Associations per 1 SD difference in (A) even-chain fatty acids (saturated fatty acid [SFA] group 1: the sum of 14:0, 16:0, and 18:0), (B) odd-chain fatty acids (SFA group 2: the sum of 15:0 and 17:0), and (C) long- and very-long-chain fatty acids (SFA group 3: the sum of 20:0, 22:0, 23:0, and 24:0) and type 2 diabetes. Estimates are per country and the pooled estimate is based on random-effects meta-analysis. The analyses included 12 132 cases of type 2 diabetes and 15 919 people in the subcohort (including 755 individuals with type 2 diabetes in the subcohort); used age as the underlying time variable; and were adjusted for centre, sex, smoking status, alcohol intake, physical activity, education level, total energy intake, and BMI. Reproduced from Forouhi NG, Koulman A, Sharp SJ, et al. Differences in the prospective association between individual plasma phospholipid saturated fatty acids and incident type 2 diabetes: the EPIC-InterAct case-cohort study. The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. 2014; pii: S2213-8587(14)70146-9, with permission from Elsevier