Balanced diets are associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes than plant-based diets

IF 6.1 3区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Diabetes research and clinical practice Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.diabres.2024.111977
Bing Kang , Xiaoqin Yin , Deqing Chen , Yandan Wang , JiangYan Lv , Jiyong Zhou , Xiangjun Chen , Xiaoxia Kou , Xin Hang , Qing Yang , Rui Wu , Xu Luo , Changyu Wang , Shumin Yang , Qifu Li , Jinbo Hu
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Abstract

Background & Aims

Plant-based diets benefit human health, while the deficient in some nutrients limits its application. We aimed to examine whether balanced diets could be better in reducing diabetes risk than plant-based diets.

Methods

In cross-sectional analysis of Environment-Inflammation-Metabolic-Diseases Study (EIMDS), we used a questionnaire to investigate the habit of balanced and plant-based diets. In the prospective analysis of UK Biobank, we used the plant-based diet index of health (hPDI) and unhealth (uPDI) to evaluate the plant-based diets, and defined the balanced diet as a daily intake of 5 categories and at least 12 types of food. After analyzing proteomic data in UK Biobank, we explored the causal relationship between signature proteins of balanced diets and incident diabetes based on summary-data-based Mendelian randomization (SMR).

Results

Compared to participants who had plant-based diets, those who had balanced diets showed a lower risk of diabetes in EIMDS (Odd Ratio 0.65, 95%CI 0.44–0.95). In UK Biobank, after excluding participants with unhealthy plant-based diets, participants with balanced diets still showed a lower diabetes risk than participants with plant-based diets (Hazard Ratio 0.86, 95%CI 0.77–0.95). Proteomic analysis identified 107 downregulated and 2 upregulated proteins that were associated with higher and lower risk of diabetes, respectively. In SMR analyses, the downregulated signature proteins of balanced diets (AGR2, DBI, IL17RA and SERPINH1) were causally associated with diabetes incidence.

Conclusion

Adhered to a balanced diet is associated with a lower risk of diabetes compared to plant-based diet, which might be attributed to signature proteins such as AGR2, DBI, IL17RA and SERPINH1.
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与植物性饮食相比,均衡饮食与患2型糖尿病的风险较低有关。
背景与目的:植物性饮食有利于人类健康,但某些营养素的缺乏限制了其应用。我们的目的是研究平衡饮食是否比植物性饮食更能降低糖尿病风险。方法:在环境-炎症-代谢-疾病研究(EIMDS)的横断面分析中,我们使用问卷调查平衡饮食和植物性饮食的习惯。在UK Biobank的前瞻性分析中,我们使用植物性饮食健康指数(hPDI)和不健康指数(uPDI)来评估植物性饮食,并将平衡饮食定义为每天摄入5类至少12种食物。在分析了英国生物银行(UK Biobank)的蛋白质组学数据后,我们基于基于汇总数据的孟德尔随机化(SMR),探讨了平衡饮食中特征蛋白与糖尿病发病之间的因果关系。结果:与植物性饮食的参与者相比,均衡饮食的参与者在EIMDS中患糖尿病的风险较低(奇比0.65,95%CI 0.44-0.95)。在英国生物银行,在排除不健康植物性饮食的参与者后,饮食平衡的参与者仍然比植物性饮食的参与者显示出更低的糖尿病风险(风险比0.86,95%CI 0.77-0.95)。蛋白质组学分析确定了107个下调蛋白和2个上调蛋白,分别与糖尿病的高风险和低风险相关。在SMR分析中,均衡饮食中下调的特征蛋白(AGR2、DBI、IL17RA和SERPINH1)与糖尿病发病率有因果关系。结论:与植物性饮食相比,坚持均衡饮食与较低的糖尿病风险相关,这可能归因于AGR2、DBI、IL17RA和SERPINH1等特征蛋白。
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来源期刊
Diabetes research and clinical practice
Diabetes research and clinical practice 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
3.90%
发文量
862
审稿时长
32 days
期刊介绍: Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice is an international journal for health-care providers and clinically oriented researchers that publishes high-quality original research articles and expert reviews in diabetes and related areas. The role of the journal is to provide a venue for dissemination of knowledge and discussion of topics related to diabetes clinical research and patient care. Topics of focus include translational science, genetics, immunology, nutrition, psychosocial research, epidemiology, prevention, socio-economic research, complications, new treatments, technologies and therapy.
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