A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Meta-Analysis Investigating Associations Between Healthy Diet and Fasting Glucose and Insulin Levels and Modification by Loci Associated With Glucose Homeostasis in Data From 15 Cohorts




AuthorsNettleton JA, Hivert MF, Lemaitre RN, McKeown NM, Mozaffarian D, Tanaka T, Wojczynski MK, Hruby A, Djousse L, Ngwa JS, Follis JL, Dimitriou M, Ganna A, Houston DK, Kanoni S, Mikkila V, Manichaikul A, Ntalla I, Renstrom F, Sonestedt E, van Rooij FJA, Bandinelli S, de Koning L, Ericson U, Hassanali N, Kiefte-de Jong JC, Lohman KK, Raitakari O, Papoutsakis C, Sjogren P, Stirrups K, Ax E, Deloukas P, Groves CJ, Jacques PF, Johansson I, Liu YM, McCarthy MI, North K, Viikari J, Zillikens MC, Dupuis J, Hofman A, Kolovou G, Mukamal K, Prokopenko I, Rolandsson O, Seppala I, Cupples LA, Hu FB, Kahonen M, Uitterlinden AG, Borecki IB, Ferrucci L, Jacobs DR, Kritchevsky SB, Orho-Melander M, Pankow JS, Lehtimaki T, Witteman JCM, Ingelsson E, Siscovick DS, Dedoussis G, Meigs JB, Franks PW

PublisherOXFORD UNIV PRESS INC

Publication year2013

JournalAmerican Journal of Epidemiology

Journal name in sourceAMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY

Journal acronymAM J EPIDEMIOL

Number in series2

Volume177

Issue2

First page 103

Last page115

Number of pages13

ISSN0002-9262

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kws297


Abstract
Whether loci that influence fasting glucose (FG) and fasting insulin (FI) levels, as identified by genome-wide association studies, modify associations of diet with FG or FI is unknown. We utilized data from 15 US and European cohort studies comprising 51,289 persons without diabetes to test whether genotype and diet interact to influence FG or FI concentration. We constructed a diet score using study-specific quartile rankings for intakes of whole grains, fish, fruits, vegetables, and nuts/seeds (favorable) and red/processed meats, sweets, sugared beverages, and fried potatoes (unfavorable). We used linear regression within studies, followed by inverse-variance-weighted meta-analysis, to quantify 1) associations of diet score with FG and FI levels and 2) interactions of diet score with 16 FG-associated loci and 2 FI-associated loci. Diet score (per unit increase) was inversely associated with FG ( 0.004 mmol/L, 95 confidence interval: 0.005, 0.003) and FI ( 0.008 ln-pmol/L, 95 confidence interval: 0.009, 0.007) levels after adjustment for demographic factors, lifestyle, and body mass index. Genotype variation at the studied loci did not modify these associations. Healthier diets were associated with lower FG and FI concentrations regardless of genotype at previously replicated FG- and FI-associated loci. Studies focusing on genomic regions that do not yield highly statistically significant associations from main-effect genome-wide association studies may be more fruitful in identifying diet-gene interactions.


Research Areas



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