Figures
Abstract
Background
We aimed to investigate prospective associations of circulating or adipose tissue odd-chain fatty acids 15:0 and 17:0 and trans-palmitoleic acid, t16:1n-7, as potential biomarkers of dairy fat intake, with incident type 2 diabetes (T2D).
Methods and findings
Sixteen prospective cohorts from 12 countries (7 from the United States, 7 from Europe, 1 from Australia, 1 from Taiwan) performed new harmonised individual-level analysis for the prospective associations according to a standardised plan. In total, 63,682 participants with a broad range of baseline ages and BMIs and 15,180 incident cases of T2D over the average of 9 years of follow-up were evaluated. Study-specific results were pooled using inverse-variance–weighted meta-analysis. Prespecified interactions by age, sex, BMI, and race/ethnicity were explored in each cohort and were meta-analysed. Potential heterogeneity by cohort-specific characteristics (regions, lipid compartments used for fatty acid assays) was assessed with metaregression. After adjustment for potential confounders, including measures of adiposity (BMI, waist circumference) and lipogenesis (levels of palmitate, triglycerides), higher levels of 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n-7 were associated with lower incidence of T2D. In the most adjusted model, the hazard ratio (95% CI) for incident T2D per cohort-specific 10th to 90th percentile range of 15:0 was 0.80 (0.73–0.87); of 17:0, 0.65 (0.59–0.72); of t16:1n7, 0.82 (0.70–0.96); and of their sum, 0.71 (0.63–0.79). In exploratory analyses, similar associations for 15:0, 17:0, and the sum of all three fatty acids were present in both genders but stronger in women than in men (pinteraction < 0.001). Whereas studying associations with biomarkers has several advantages, as limitations, the biomarkers do not distinguish between different food sources of dairy fat (e.g., cheese, yogurt, milk), and residual confounding by unmeasured or imprecisely measured confounders may exist.
Author summary
Why was this study done?
- Effects of dairy fat on type 2 diabetes (T2D) are not well established. While dairy fat contains palmitic acid that could increase risk of T2D, it also contains several other types of fatty acids and further reflects specific foods, such as cheese or yogurt, that could reduce risk.
- Most prior studies of dairy foods and T2D have relied on self-reported dietary questionnaires, which may have errors or bias in memory as well as challenges in assessing less apparent sources of dairy fat such as in creams, sauces, cheeses, and cooking fats in mixed meals and prepared foods.
- Circulating and tissue biomarker concentrations of odd-chain saturated fats (15:0, 17:0) and natural ruminant trans-fats (trans-16:1n7) at least partly reflect dairy fat consumption, help capture multiple dietary sources without relying on memory or subjective reporting, and reflect a complementary approach to investigate associations with T2D.
- A consortium strategy combining all available studies maximises statistical power and generalizability, allows standardised analytical approaches and methods including of key population subgroups, and minimises potential for publication bias.
What did the researchers do and find?
- We conducted a consortium project to pool new participant-level analyses of 16 cohort studies as part of the Fatty Acids and Outcomes Research Consortium (FORCE), including a total of 63,682 adults free of T2D at baseline, among whom 15,158 developed incident T2D over up to 20 years of follow-up.
- Participating studies conducted standardised analysis of the prospective associations between fatty acid biomarkers (15:0, 17:0, trans-16:1n7, and their sum) and the risk of developing T2D.
- Pooling all studies, each of the biomarkers and their sum were associated with lower risk of developing T2D, independently of major risk factors for T2D, including age, sex, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, physical activity, and obesity.
- For example, for the sum of these biomarkers, participants with higher levels experienced 29% (95% CI 21% to 37%) lower risk of T2D than adults with lower levels, comparing between the midpoints of the top fifth and the bottom fifth of concentrations.
What do these findings mean?
- Higher circulating and tissue concentrations of odd-chain saturated fats and a natural ruminant trans-fat are associated with lower risk of T2D.
- While these biomarkers are known to reflect dairy fat consumption, their levels could also be influenced by other unknown factors. The findings support the need for investigation of determinants of levels of these fatty acids as well as health effects of dairy fat in interventional studies.
- Despite the several advantages of evaluating fatty acid biomarkers, the results cannot distinguish between different types of dairy foods (e.g., milk, cheese, yogurt, others), which could have differential effects.
- The findings provide the strongest evidence to date for relationships of these fatty acid biomarkers with T2D, informing the potential health effects and corresponding dietary recommendations for consumption of selected dairy products.
Citation: Imamura F, Fretts A, Marklund M, Ardisson Korat AV, Yang W-S, Lankinen M, et al. (2018) Fatty acid biomarkers of dairy fat consumption and incidence of type 2 diabetes: A pooled analysis of prospective cohort studies. PLoS Med 15(10): e1002670. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002670
Academic Editor: Andrew T. Hattersley, University of Exeter, UNITED KINGDOM
Received: April 16, 2018; Accepted: September 7, 2018; Published: October 10, 2018
Copyright: © 2018 Imamura et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: The institutional IRB approvals and data sharing agreements for the participating cohorts allowed us to share cohort results. Individual participant data are owned by individual participating cohorts and are available to researchers consented from participating cohorts. For further queries or requests, please contact force@tufts.edu. Further details are available at the FORCE website: http://force.nutrition.tufts.edu/.
Funding: FI, NGF, and NJW were funded by the United Kingdom Medical Research Council Epidemiology Unit core grant (MC_UU_12015/1 and MC_UU_12015/5); NGF, NJW, and AK acknowledge National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre Cambridge (IS-BRC-1215-20014); IAB, by the European Union (FP7 and Horizon2020) and the Dutch Scientific Organisation (ZonMW); CS, by the Fondation Plan Alzheimer; and AVAK, by the National Institute of Health (NIH) training grant (3T32DK007703). The AOC was funded by the Netherlands Heart Foundation (grant 2000T401), the NIH (NIH/ National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [NHLBI], and ODS, grant R01HL- 076200), and Unilever R&D, Vlaardingen (margarine production and distribution); Age, Gene/Environment Susceptibility Study Reykjavik, by Office of Dietary Supplements, NIH (N01-AG012100), the National Institute of Aging (NIA) Intramural Research Program, Hjartavernd (the Icelandic Heart Association), and the Althingi (the Icelandic Parliament); Chin-Shan Community Cardiovascular Study, by Ministry of Science and Technology and National Taiwan University (MOST 103-2314-B-002 -135 –MY3, NSC 100-2314-B-002 -113 –MY3, NTUH 105-S3120, NTUH 106-S3453); Cardiovascular Health Study, by NHLBI (HHSN268201200036C, HHSN268200800007C, N01HC55222, N01HC85079, N01HC85080, N01HC85081, N01HC85082, N01HC85083, N01HC85086, and grants U01HL080295 and U01HL130114), with additional contribution from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and NIA (R01AG023629; Framingham Heart Study, NHLBI in collaboration with Boston University (N01-HC-25195); Health Professionals Follow-up Study, by NIH (UM1 CA167552, R01 HL35464, AA11181, HL35464, CA55075, HL60712, and P30 DK46200); Insulin Resistance Atherosclerosis Study, by NIH (M01-RR-43) and NHLBI (U01-HL-47892, U01-HL-47902, DK-29867, R01-58329, and DK-079888; InterAct, by the EU FP6 programme (LSHM_CT_2006_037197); Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study, by VicHealth and Cancer Council Victoria and by Australia’s National Health and Medical Research Council (209057, 251553, and 126403); Multi-ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, by NHLBI (HHSN268201500003I, N01-HC-95159, N01-HC-95160, N01-HC-95161, N01-HC-95162, N01-HC-95163, N01-HC-95164, N01-HC-95165, N01-HC-95166, N01-HC-95167, N01-HC-95168 and N01-HC-95169) and NCRR (UL1-TR-000040 and UL1-TR-001079); Metabolic Syndrome in Men Study, by the European Union, the Academy of Finland, and the Juselius Foundation; Nurses’ Health Study, by NIH (CA186107, CA87969, CA49449, HL34594, HL35464, CA167552, HL60712, and HL088521); Prospective Investigation of the Vascularture in Uppsala Seniors, by Uppsala University Hospital and the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare; Tree City Study, by the Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale, the Caisse Nationale Maladie des Travailleurs Salaries, Direction Generale de la Sante, MGEN, Institut de la Longevite, Conseils Regionaux d’Aquitaine et Bourgogne, Fondation de France, Ministry of Research–Institut National de la Sante and de la Recherche Medicale Programme Cohortes, Agence Nationale de la Recherche (COGINUT ANR-06-PNRA-005), Fondation Plan Alzheimer (FCS 2009-2012), and the Caisse Nationale pour la Solidarite et l’Autonomie, under a partnership agreement between the Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale, the University Bordeaux 2 Victor Segalen; Uppsala Longitudinal Studies of Adult Men 50 and 70, by the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare, Uppsala City Council, and Swedish Research Council; Women’s Health Initiative, by the NHLBI, NIH, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHSN268201600018C, HHSN268201600001C, HHSN268201600002C, HHSN268201600003C, and HHSN268201600004C). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: JHYW and RM report research support from Unilever for other projects of the FORCE on other fatty acid biomarkers. RM reports personal fees from the World Bank and Bunge outside the submitted work. IAB reported involvement in a research project partly funded by Unilever. JMG and JdG received funding from Unilever for epidemiological studies of dietary and circulating fatty acids and cardiometabolic disease and for research on assessment of fatty acids. LCdG reported receiving ad hoc consulting fees from the Life Sciences Research Organization. CH reported receiving fees for a conference from Novartis. NGF is an invited member (unpaid) of ILSI-Europe Qualitative Fat Intake Task Force Expert Group on update on health effects of different saturated fats. DM reports research funding from the NIH and the Gates Foundation; personal fees from GOED, DSM, Nutrition Impact, Pollock Communications, Bunge, Indigo Agriculture, Amarin, Acasti Pharma, and America’s Test Kitchen; scientific advisory board, Omada Health, Elysium Health, and DayTwo; and chapter royalties from UpToDate; all outside the submitted work. Patents US8889739 and US9987243 to Tufts University (unlicensed), listing DM as a co-inventor, for use of trans-palmitoleic acid to prevent and treat insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, and related conditions, as well as reduce metabolic risk factors. SSSM reported receiving an international award and unrestricted grants for meta-analysis work on dairy foods and cardiometabolic diseases from Global and Dutch Dairy Associations. Other authors do not have any conflict of interest to declare. The lead author affirms that the manuscript is an honest, accurate, and transparent account of the study being reported; that no important aspects of the study have been omitted; and that any discrepancies from the study as planned (and, if relevant, registered) have been explained.
Abbreviations: AGESR, Age, Genes, Environment Susceptibility Study (Reykjavik); AOC, Alpha Omega Cohort; CCCC, Chin-Shan Community Cardiovascular Cohort Study; CHS, Cardiovascular Health Study; FHS, Framingham Heart Study; FORCE, Fatty Acids and Outcomes Research Consortium; HPFS, Health Professionals’ Follow-up Study; MCCS, Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study; MESA, Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis; METSIM, Metabolic Syndrome in Men Study; NHS, Nurses’ Health Study; PIVUS, Prospective Investigation of the Vasculature in Uppsala Seniors; RR, relative risk; T2D, type 2 diabetes mellitus; Three C, Three City Study; ULSAM, Uppsala Longitudinal Study of Adult Men; WHIMS, Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study
Introduction
Regular consumption of dairy products is widely recommended in national and international guidelines as a major source of calcium and other minerals and vitamins as well as in low-income countries as a source of calories and protein. At least in high-income nations, fat-reduced dairy products are further recommended, rather than whole-fat products, with the aim of limiting calories and saturated fat [1]. However, these latter recommendations are primarily based on nutrient profiles of low-fat and whole-fat dairy products rather than empirical evidence on clinical effects of dairy fat from prospective observational studies or trials [2–8]. In clinical trials, consuming low-fat or free-fat dairy products does not consistently improve intermediate risk factors compared to consuming whole-fat or overall dairy products [2–4]. In observational studies, total dairy consumption has not been associated with cardiovascular diseases, without consistent distinction based on dairy fat content. Regardless of fat content, total dairy consumption has been associated with lower incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) [8], whereas evidence is inconsistent for different types of dairy foods such as milk, yogurt, and cheese.
Studies assessing dairy consumption using self-reported dietary questionnaires may be partly limited by misclassification or bias in reporting [9]. In addition, the common use of dairy products such as butter, milk, cheese, and cream in cooking, in mixed dishes (e.g., pizza), and bakery products (e.g., cakes) may substantially impede an accurate assessment of exposure to dairy fat. To reduce these limitations, measured biomarkers correlated with dairy fat consumption can be used, including circulating and adipose proportions of pentadecanoic acid (15-carbon saturated fatty acid, 15:0), heptadecanoic acid (17:0), and trans-palmitoleic acid (t16:1n7) [10–20]. Levels of these biomarkers correlate with self-reported consumption of total dairy, high-fat dairy, and dairy fat (r = 0.4 to 0.7) based on 24-hour recalls or 7-day food records [16–18]; are significantly increased in response to dairy consumption or decreased in replacing high-fat dairy with low-fat dairy in trials [19,20]; and are correlated with each other even though they represent two distinct fatty acid classes (the odd-chain saturated fats 15:0 and 17:0; the natural ruminant trans-fat t16:1n7) with divergent chemical structures and metabolism.
To date, several individual cohorts have published on associations of the odd-chain saturated fatty acids only [21] or odd-chain fatty acids and t16:1n7 together [13,14,22] with incidence of T2D. However, potential for publication bias cannot be excluded; individual studies may be underpowered to detect potential differences in associations by sex or other characteristics [8]. To address these limitations and provide new evidence on relationships between these biomarkers and T2D, we conducted a pooling project to test the hypothesis that higher concentrations of 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n7 would be associated with lower incident T2D, evaluating adults free from T2D in prospective cohorts participating in the Fatty Acids and Outcomes Research Consortium (FORCE).
Methods
Cohorts and study variables
FORCE was formed within the framework of the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium fatty acid working group to focus on relationships between fatty acid biomarkers and health outcomes (http://force.nutrition.tufts.edu/about) [23,24]. FORCE cohorts were identified through expert contacts with existing large cohorts and publications, with updating over time when new cohort publications were identified. For the current investigation, we included 16 prospective studies (cohorts, nested case-control studies, or nested case-cohort studies) that met the following inclusion criteria and agreed to participate: adult aged 18 years or older free from diabetes at the time of fatty acid assessment; circulating or adipose 15:0, 17:0, or t16:1n7; and follow-up for incident T2D (S1 Text). Other cohorts participating in FORCE [23,24] did not contribute to this study because data on these fatty acids and/or incident T2D were not available. All cohorts obtained institutional review board approval and informed consents from participants. Authors FI and AF have full access to the data that are available upon request to the central committee of FORCE.
A standardised analysis protocol (S2 Text) was developed and was provided to each participating cohort. It included inclusion criteria (adults aged 18 years or older, not with diabetes, and with data on fatty acids and incident T2D), exposures, covariates, effect modifiers, outcomes, and longitudinal analyses. Following this harmonised protocol, each cohort performed new analysis of individual-level data. Study-specific results were entered to a standardised electronic form and compiled centrally; the results were then pooled in meta-analysis [25].
Details of participating cohorts, study participants, fatty acid assessment, ascertainment of incident T2D, and relevant citations are presented in S1 Text; fatty acid concentrations were assessed with gas chromatography in each cohort in one or more lipid compartments, including erythrocyte phospholipids, plasma phospholipids, plasma cholesteryl esters, plasma triglycerides, total plasma, or adipose tissue. Fatty acid concentrations in each cohort were expressed as a percent of total fatty acids in each lipid fraction. In extended analysis of prior work [22], within-person correlations of phospholipid fatty acids were moderate over 6 and 13 years (n = 607) (r = 0.64 and 0.46 for 15:0, respectively; 0.66 and 0.47 for 17:0; and 0.59 and 0.45 for t16:1n7), consistent with other biometric risk factors such as blood pressure [26].
In most cohorts, incident T2D was ascertained based on one or more criteria (S1 Text), including fasting glucose ≥126 mg/dL (7.0 mmol/L); 2-hour post oral glucose tolerance test glucose ≥200 mg/dL (11.1 mmol/L); new use of insulin or oral hypoglycaemic medication assessed by participant reports, medication inventories, or registries (S1 Text); and fasting or nonfasting HbA1C concentration ≥6.5%. In the Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study (MCCS) [27] and the Alpha Omega Cohort (AOC) [28], incident T2D was defined by self-reported physician diagnosis, use of antidiabetic medication, or both. InterAct defined incident T2D by adjudicating self-reported diagnosis of T2D or data linkage to disease registry [21]. In studies with time-to-event data, follow-up time was calculated from baseline (time of fatty acid measurement) to date of development of incident T2D, death from any cause, loss to follow-up, or censoring at end of follow-up—whichever came first.
Statistical analysis in individual studies
Statistical analyses were prespecified to describe population characteristics and conduct prospective analyses of associations of the fatty acid biomarkers and incident T2D. The primary exposure variables were 15:0, 17:0, t16:1n7, and their sum (or if only two were available, the sum of the two). The sum was considered a biomarker of dairy fat intake, given the available evidence that these each of these fatty acids at least partly reflects dairy fat intakes [11–20] and that these fatty acids are mutually intercorrelated [12–16,22]. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated between these fatty acids in each study and between fractions in different lipid compartments when available in the same cohort.
For prospective associations, Cox proportional hazard regression models were fitted to data from cohort or nested case-cohort studies. In the MCCS [27] without detailed time-to-event data for participants, logistic regression was used. The fatty acids were evaluated as a continuous linear variable in units of the study-specific 10th to 90th percentile range and, in a separate model, as a dummy categorical variable (quintile categories).
Covariates in all multivariable-adjusted analyses were prespecified. The primary model included age, sex, field site, race, education, occupation, physical activity, smoking, alcohol use, prevalent hypertension (treated or self-reported), prevalent dyslipidaemia (treated or self-reported), prevalent coronary heart disease, and self-reported health status. We obtained measures of association from two additional models: one further adjusting for adiposity measures (BMI and waist circumference) and the other further adjusting for circulating concentrations of triglycerides and palmitate (16:0), markers of hepatic de novo lipogenesis. Study-specific approaches were allowed for modelling some covariates (e.g., numbers of education categories, imputation for missing covariates), depending on availability and prior established cohort-specific approaches, to minimise confounding bias within each cohort [25]. Using the multivariable-adjusted model including adiposity measures, we obtained study-specific measures of effect modification by age, sex, BMI, and race/ethnicity (indicator categories with white race as the reference group) by evaluating the coefficient of a crossproduct term between each fatty acid variable and each of the prespecified factors.
Meta-analysis
Study-specific regression coefficients and measures of precision (standard errors) from each of continuous and categorical terms were pooled with an inverse-variance–weighted meta-analysis to estimate summary relative risks (RRs) per the 10th to 90th percentile range and quintile categories. Between-study heterogeneity was expressed as I-squared [29]. Odds ratios estimated in a study without information on time to event were considered to approximate RRs, and RRs were assumed to represent hazard ratios as well. Four cohorts assessed fatty acids in two lipid compartments: the Prospective Investigation of the Vasculature in Uppsala Seniors (PIVUS) and the AOC evaluated plasma cholesteryl esters and plasma phospholipid fatty acids, and the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) and the Health Professionals’ Follow-up Study (HPFS) evaluated total plasma and red blood cell phospholipid fatty acids. In the primary meta-analysis, not to double-count estimates from these cohorts, we used estimates of phospholipid fatty acids that were likely to reflect a longer-term exposure than the other compartments [30]. Estimates from separate fractions were obtained separately as stratified analysis by lipid fractions.
Cohort-specific coefficients of crossproduct terms were pooled by inverse-variance–weighted meta-analysis to test potential interactions. Because analyses of potential interactions by age, sex, race/ethnicity, or BMI were exploratory, we corrected for multiple testing with two-tailed alpha = 0.0031 (0.05; 4 fatty acid variables; 4 potential effect modifiers). Because interactions by sex were significant, we post hoc estimated sex-specific RRs by obtaining relevant statistics from each cohort. We also conducted metaregression and stratified meta-analyses to examine whether associations varied by study-specific characteristics, including lipid compartment, region (the United States, Europe/Australia, Asia), mean prevalence of dyslipidaemia, and numbers of fatty acids assessed. Meta-analyses were performed using Stata software version 14.2 (Stata Corp., College Station, Texas) with alpha = 0.05 unless otherwise specified.
Results
The 16 prospective studies (7 in the US, 7 in Europe, 1 in Australia, 1 in Taiwan) included 63,682 participants without known diabetes at baseline, among whom 15,180 incident T2D cases were identified during an average 9 years of follow-up (Table 1). All studies followed middle-aged or older adults with baseline mean age in each cohort ranging from 49 to 76 years. Average BMIs ranged from 25.0 to 28.4 kg/m2 except for Taiwan with an average BMI of 23.3 kg/m2. Most studies included predominantly white participants, although meaningful numbers of nonwhites were included in the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS; 11.0% nonwhite), the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA; 71.6% nonwhite), the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS; 11.6% nonwhite), and the Taiwanese study (100% Asian).
Relative concentrations of 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n7 were generally low (0.1% to 0.5 mol% of total fatty acids), as previously described (Fig 1) [13,14,21,22]. Correlations between 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n7 ranged from 0.3 to 0.8, with the exception of r = 0.0 in the Insulin Resistance Atherosclerosis Study and WHIMS (S1 Table). Correlations of each of the fatty acids between two lipid fractions (e.g., phospholipids and total plasma; phospholipids and cholesteryl esters) were also moderate to strong (r = 0.39 to 0.75) (S2 Table).
Plots represent median (diamond) and ranges of the 10th to 90th percentiles (horizontal bar). See Table 1 for the abbreviations of cohorts. CE, cholesteryl ester; NL, the Netherlands; PL, phospholipid; RBC, red blood cell; t16:1n7, trans-16:1 n-7; US, United States.
In meta-analysis of 15:0 (16 cohorts, 59,701 participants, 14,658 cases), higher 15:0 levels were associated with 26% lower risk of T2D (per 10th to 90th percentile range, pooled RR = 0.74 [95% CI 0.68–0.80]) adjusted for demographic, clinical, socioeconomic, and lifestyle variables (S1 Fig); 20% lower risk (RR = 0.80 [95% CI 0.74–0.87]) when further adjusted for adiposity measures (Fig 2); and 20% lower risk (RR = 0.80 [95% CI 0.73–0.87]) when further adjusted for biomarker concentrations of palmitic acid and triglycerides (S2 Fig). Inverse associations were also observed for 17:0 (13 cohorts, 50,579 participants, 13,720 cases), t16:1n7 (8 studies, 18,901 participants, 1,636 cases), and the sum of dairy biomarker fatty acids (15 studies, 53,550 participants, 14,175 cases). In post hoc sensitivity analyses excluding the study with the largest weight (InterAct or WHIMS, Fig 2), results were not substantially altered: RR per 10th to 90th percentile range (95% CI) for 15:0, 0.75 (95% CI 0.62–0.92); for 17:0, 0.73 (95% CI 0.55–0.96); for t16:1n7, 0.84 (95% CI 0.72–0.98); and for their sum, 0.75 (95% CI 0.57–0.99).
RR and 95% CIs per cohort-specific range from the 10th to 90th percentiles are presented: dots from individual studies and diamonds as summary estimates pooled by inverse-variance–weighted meta-analysis. The sizes of the grey shaded areas represent relative contributions of each cohort to that summary estimate. Cohort-specific association was assessed in multivariable models in each cohort adjusting for sex, age, field site (if appropriate), race, socioeconomic status (education, occupation), smoking status, physical activity, alcohol consumption, family history of diabetes, dyslipidaemia, hypertension, menopausal status (only for women), prevalent coronary heart disease, BMI, and waist circumference. Models without the adiposity measures and models including palmitate (16:0) and triglycerides did not alter the results materially (S1 Fig). See Table 1 for the abbreviations of cohorts. NL, the Netherlands; RR, relative risk; T2D, type 2 diabetes mellitus; US, United States.
Results were similar evaluating risk across quintile groups of each fatty acid including in each multivariable model (Fig 3). Comparing the top to the bottom quintile of fatty acid levels in the fully adjusted model, RRs (95% CI) were 0.63 (0.52–0.76) for 15:0, 0.64 (0.47–0.87) for 17:0, 0.83 (0.62–1.11) for t16:1n7, and 0.65 (0.51–0.83) for their sum. Moderate to high heterogeneity was evident (I2 ranging from 60% to 90%) (Fig 2, S1 Fig, S3 Fig), except for t16:1n7 (I2 0% to 7.7%). Results of post hoc analysis estimating random effects were similar (S3 Table).
Cohort-specific associations by quintiles were assessed in multivariable models in each cohort and pooled with inverse-variance–weighted meta-analysis. Cohort-specific multivariable adjustment was made. In the first model (open diamond), estimates were adjusted for sex, age, smoking status, alcohol consumption, socioeconomic status, physical activity, dyslipidaemia, hypertension, and menopausal status (only for women). Then, the estimates were further adjusted for BMI (grey diamond) and further adjusted for triglycerides and palmitic acid (16:0) as markers of de novo lipogenesis (black diamond). To compute p-values for a trend across quintiles, each fatty acid was evaluated as an ordinal variable in the most adjusted model. T2D, type 2 diabetes mellitus.
In exploratory analyses, the inverse association with T2D was stronger in women than in men for 15:0 (pinteraction = 0.0003), 17:0 (pinteraction = 0.003), and the sum of the fatty acids (pinteraction = 0.0003), with women experiencing a 20% to 27% lower risk than men (S3 Table). For example, RR (95% CI) per 10th to 90th percentile range for 15:0 was 0.76 (0.69–0.84) for women and 0.93 (0.85–1.01) for men. Metaregression did not identify any other significant sources of heterogeneity (pinteraction > 0.1 each), including by geographic region, measured lipid compartment, prevalence of dyslipidaemia, or the number of fatty acids assessed (S3 Table).
Discussion
This harmonised pooling project of participant-level data among 16 prospective cohort studies provides, to our knowledge, the most comprehensive evidence for associations of biomarker levels of 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n7 with risk of T2D. Comparing the top to the bottom quintile of participants in each cohort, we found that higher levels of the sum of these fatty acids were associated with approximately 30% lower risk of developing T2D. This relationship remained significant after adjustment for demographic characteristics, socioeconomic status, lifestyle factors, medical history, adiposity measures, and biomarkers of de novo lipogenesis.
Measured circulating and tissue levels of 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n7 are free from bias in relation to memory or reporting. Compared with estimated dairy fat intake from self-reported questionnaires, direct measurement also facilitates assessment of exposure to numerous ‘hidden’ sources of dairy fat in the food supply, e.g., as found in many dishes that include varying amounts of sauces, creams, and butter, milk, or cheese as mixed or prepared meals. Odd-chain saturated fats can be found in other foods, such as meat or fish [31,32], and their blood levels are measurable among self-reported vegans [10]. However, levels among vegans are significantly lower than among lacto-ovo vegetarians, supporting a sensitivity of the biomarkers to dairy fat consumption [10]. Several additional lines of evidence support a role of these fatty acids as biomarkers reflecting consumption of dairy fat and high-fat dairy products. First, among different food groups, correlations of these fatty acid biomarkers are strongest with dairy foods and dairy fat [12,15,16]. Such correlations are generally low to modest (r = 0.1 to 0.5) in studies using food-frequency questionnaires (which may miss many ‘hidden’ sources of dairy fat) [12,13,21] but much stronger (r = 0.4 to 0.7) in studies evaluating 24-hour recalls or 7-day food records, which much more completely capture the types and details of specific foods consumed [16–18]. Second, in controlled interventions, levels of these fatty acids are significantly increased or decreased in response to even moderate changes in dairy fat consumption [11,19]. Third, these two very different classes of fatty acids—the odd-chain saturated fats 15:0 and 17:0, and the natural ruminant trans-fat t16:1n7—are intercorrelated with each other and also similarly associated with T2D. If either endogenous metabolic influences or non-dairy dietary sources were a primary determinant of their levels, little plausible rationale would exist for a meaningful interrelation of these biochemically and metabolically unrelated fatty acids. Finally, while as a biomarker of dairy fat the circulating levels of these fatty acids could also be influenced by meat or fish consumption [10], such foods are not associated with lower risk of T2D in Western populations (and red meat is associated with higher risk) [33,34], so that such influences would weaken associations of these fatty acids with T2D.
A small crossover trial (n = 16) recently evaluated potential endogenous production of 15:0 and 17:0 from dietary fibre (inulin) and propionate (a short-chain [3-carbon] fatty acid) in comparison to cellulose [35,36]. The primary randomised comparison did not identify any significant effect of these factors on 15:0 or 17:0 levels. In secondary analyses evaluating pre-post (nonrandomised) levels, inulin intake was associated with higher levels of 17:0, while propionate was associated with higher 15:0 and 17:0; this was further supported by an accompanying in vitro–controlled experiment suggesting elongation of propionate into 15:0 and 17:0 using liver cancer cells [35]. The major dietary source of propionate is cheese (157 mg per 100 g), in particular Swiss cheese (311 mg per 100 g), with far lower levels in other dairy foods such as milk, yogurt, and cream (2–9 mg per 100 g) and even lower levels in other major food groups (<1 mg per 100 g) (S4 Table) [37]. High levels in cheese are plausibly related to the presence of propionate-producing bacteria and the use of sodium propionate and other propionate salts as natural preservatives and mould inhibitors in cheese [37]. These findings further support the role of odd-chain saturated fatty acids as biomarkers of dairy fat consumption, both as contained in dairy fat and as potentially synthesised from propionate in cheese [35,36].
While 15:0 has a modestly stronger correlation with self-reported dairy foods than 17:0 in some prior studies [10,12,13,16–18], we found that 17:0 was more strongly associated with lower risk of T2D. Reasons for this are unclear but could reflect differences in blood lipid compartments assessed, 17:0 being a better measure of ‘hidden’ dairy fat in mixed foods, or possible differences in metabolic influences as mentioned above [35,38].
Our findings support the need for careful investigation to elucidate the potential biological mechanisms underlying the observed lower risk of T2D. Odd-chain fatty acids and t16:1n7 have structural similarity to 16:0 and may interfere with lipotoxic effects of 16:0 on the pancreas [39]; it has also been hypothesised that t16:1n7 may mimic cis-16:1n7 and suppress hepatic de novo lipogenesis [13]. These fatty acids may also be a marker for other beneficial compounds in dairy fat or dairy-fat–rich foods such as cheese [40]. Examples of relevant constituents could include magnesium, which appears to improve hyperglycaemia and insulin resistance [41], and oestrogens, which are naturally present in dairy products [42,43] and which may reduce the risk of T2D [43], as shown in two trials recruiting postmenopausal women [44,45]. However, these prior trials tested supradietary doses of magnesium (>250 mg/day) and oestrogens (3 mg/day) [41,44,45] compared with typical doses in dairy foods, approximately 20 mg and <0.01 mg, respectively, in 150 g of milk or yogurt, for example [42,43]. Probiotics such as in yogurt lower glucose and HbA1c in trials [40,46], suggesting relevant interactions between probiotics, short-chain fatty acids, gut microbiota, and T2D [35,40]. Fermented milk and cheeses are also linked to lower risk of T2D [47], suggesting potential metabolic benefits of vitamin K2 or other compounds produced during fermentation [40]. Other constituents of dairy hypothesised to improve metabolic risk include vitamin D and calcium, but for which supplement trials do not support antidiabetic effects [48], branched-chain amino acids, but for which limited evidence suggests potential harms on insulin sensitivity [49], and animal protein, but which is not associated with lower risk of T2D [50]. Given the prevalence of dairy foods in the food supply and the prevailing conventional wisdom to avoid dairy fat, our results indicate a clear need for further clinical and biochemical investigations on 15:0, 17:0, t16:1n7, and other components of dairy fats to clarify the mechanisms underlying our observations and help better understand roles of dairy consumption for the prevention of T2D and related diseases.
In exploratory analyses, the inverse association of 15:0 and 17:0 with T2D was stronger in women than in men. Consistent with this, a meta-analysis of self-reported consumption of dairy products suggested stronger protective associations of yogurt consumption with T2D risk in women than in men (RR per 50 g/day = 0.89 in women and 0.97 in men; pheterogeneity = 0.03) [8]. If confirmed in future studies, such an interaction may help elucidate potential mechanisms of benefit, e.g., pathways related to sex steroids [51] or starch and sugar intake (as a substitute for dairy fat) [52] and corresponding effects on atherogenic dyslipidaemia, visceral adiposity, and insulin resistance [52].
Our analysis has several strengths. Use of biomarkers provided measures free of limitations in self-reported dietary exposure. The similar results from several fatty acids linked to dairy fat increased confidence in the specificity of our findings. Our collaborative pooling of cohorts across different continents led to large numbers of studies, participants, and events, increasing both generalisability and statistical power. The pooling of all available cohorts minimised potential for publication bias of just the few individually significant cohorts. The standardised definitions and modelling of the populations, exposures, outcomes, and multivariable-adjusted analyses minimised bias and heterogeneity due to methodological considerations.
Potential limitations deserve consideration. The timing of diagnosis of T2D can be delayed, causing misclassification of timing in survival analysis. However, most cohorts included regular study visits and many included regular glycaemic measurements, reducing such misclassification in comparison to clinical practice. Also, any delays in diagnosis would likely be random with respect to baseline measures of fatty acid biomarkers, causing bias toward the null and increased uncertainty in estimates. Fatty acid biomarkers were assessed at baseline in each cohort, and variability over time would lead to regression dilution bias of associations toward the null. The biomarkers, despite several advantages, cannot distinguish between different food sources of dairy fat (e.g., cheese, yogurt, milk) or other foods. As an alternative to pooling of standardised participant-level analysis, all individuals could have been combined into a single dataset. Such an analysis would have a larger statistical power than our two-stage approach but require stronger assumptions, such as about covariate effects being constant across all studies [25]. Unmeasured or imprecisely measured factors may cause residual confounding, although we adjusted for major potential confounders including obesity and triglyceride levels and confirmed little difference in results across different models. Additionally, while high consumption of dairy products may be correlated with health consciousness or healthy dietary patterns in some populations [53], health-conscious consumers may have been more likely to consume low-fat than whole-fat dairy during the time periods of these studies given the prevailing dietary recommendations. Therefore residual confounding, if present, may cause underestimation of the strength of the inverse associations. As in many meta-analyses, between-study heterogeneity was evidenced and could not be fully explained. The large numbers of cases in many cohorts increased the precision of each within-study estimate, which increases the chances of finding even unimportant heterogeneity. Heterogeneity could also partly relate to varying degrees of intercorrelations between fatty acids and between tissues as well as underlying differences in populations, dietary patterns, and varieties of dairy products, including processing and fat contents. We had more limited data in nonwhite populations, requiring further research in diverse populations for which different types of dairy products may be consumed with different preparation methods.
In summary, our consortium of 16 prospective cohort studies identified significant associations of higher concentrations of 15:0, 17:0, and t16:1n7 with lower incidence of T2D. These novel findings support the need for additional clinical and molecular research to elucidate the potential effects of these fatty acids on glucose–insulin metabolism and the potential role of selected dairy products for the prevention of T2D.
Supporting information
S1 Table. Correlations between fatty acid biomarkers for dairy fat consumption.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002670.s001
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S2 Table. Correlations between fatty acid biomarkers for dairy fat consumption of two lipid fractions.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002670.s002
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S3 Table. Prospective associations of fatty acid biomarkers for dairy fat consumption with the risk of developing T2D: Stratified analyses by regions, lipid fractions, prevalence of dyslipidaemia, and the number of fatty acids measured.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002670.s003
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S4 Table. Average amounts of naturally occurring propionate in selected foods.
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S1 Fig. Prospective associations of fatty acid biomarkers for dairy fat consumption with the risk of developing T2D.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002670.s005
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S2 Fig. Prospective associations of fatty acid biomarkers for dairy fat consumption with the risk of developing T2D after adjustment for adiposity measures, palmitic acid, and triglycerides.
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S1 Text. Characteristics of prospective cohorts evaluating associations of fatty acid biomarkers for dairy fat consumption with the risk of developing T2D.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002670.s007
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Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge Eveline Waterham, Wageningen University, Wageningen, the Netherlands, for analyses of data from the Alpha Omega Cohort (AOC). Information on InterAct Consortium and FORCE can be found at http://www.inter-act.eu/ and http://force.nutrition.tufts.edu/about.
Disclaimer
This manuscript does not reflect the opinions or conclusions of any funding agency. The funders and funding organizations for participating cohorts had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, interpretation of the data, preparation of the manuscript, and the decision to submit.
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