Deelnemers

Heb je een vraag? Neem gerust contact met ons op.

 

Telefoon: 050 - 36 11 113 (werkdagen van 8.00 - 17.00 uur)

Contactformulier

Researchers

Do you have a question regarding working with Lifelines? Please contact us, we're happy to help you.

Contact us

Pers

We voorzien media graag van informatie en we behandelen graag verzoeken voor interviews, opnames en beeldmateriaal.

Stuur een e-mail

Contact

Socio-economic disparities in the association of diet quality and Type 2 Diabetes incidence in the Dutch Lifelines Cohort

ABSTRACT:

Background/objectives: It is unknown whether a socio-economic difference exists in the association of diet quality with type 2 diabetes incidence, nor how diet influences the socioeconomic inequality in diabetes burden.

Subjects/methods: In 91,025 participants of the population-based Lifelines Cohort (aged ≥30, no diabetes or cardiovascular diseases at baseline), type 2 diabetes incidence was based on self-report, fasting glucose ≥ 7·0 mmol/l and/or HbA1c ≥ 6·5%. The evidence-based Lifelines Diet Score was calculated with data of a 110-item food frequency questionnaire. Socio-economic status (SES) was defined by educational level. Cox proportional hazards models were adjusted for age, gender, smoking, energy intake, alcohol intake and physical activity.

Findings: In 279 796 person-years of follow-up, 1045 diabetes cases were identified. Incidence rate was 5·7, 3·2 and 2·4 cases/1000 person-years in low, middle and high SES, respectively. Lower diet quality was associated with greater diabetes risk (HR(95%CI) in Q1 (poor diet quality) vs. Q5 (high diet quality)=2·11 (1·70-2·62)). SES was a moderator of the association(pINTERACTION=0·038). HRs for Q1 vs. Q5 were 1·66 (1·22-2·.27) in low, 2·76 (1·86-4·08) in middle and 2·46 (1·53-3·97) in high SES. With population attributable fractions of 14·8%, 40·1% and 37·1%, the expected number of cases/1000 person-years preventable by diet quality improvement was 0·85 in low, 1·28 in middle and 0·90 in high SES.

Interpretation: Diet quality improvement can potentially prevent one in three cases of type 2 diabetes, but because of a smaller impact in low SES, it will not narrow the socioeconomic health gap in diabetes burden.

Year of publication

2020

Journal

EClinicalMedicine

Author(s)

Vinke, PC
Navis, G
Kromhout, D
Corpeleijn, E

Full publication

Click here to view the full publicationClick here to view the full publication

Tags