Tea consumption and incidence of type 2 diabetes in Europe: The EPIC-interact case-cohort study

Background: In previous meta-analyses, tea consumption has been associated with lower incidence of type 2 diabetes. It is unclear, however, if tea is associated inversely over the entire range of intake. Therefore, we investigated the association between tea consumption and incidence of type 2 diabe...

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Main Authors: van Woudenbergh, G, Kuijsten, A, Drogan, D, van der A, D, Romaguera, D, Ardanaz, E, Amiano, P, Barricarte, A, Beulens, J, Boeing, H, Bueno-de-Mesquita, H, Dahm, C, Chirlaque, M, Clavel, F, Crowe, F, Eomois, P, Fagherazzi, G, Franks, P, Halkjær, J, Khaw, K, Masala, G, Mattiello, A, Nilsson, P, Overvad, K, Quirós, JR, Rolandsson, O, Romieu, I, Sacerdote, C, Sánchez, M, Schulze, M, Slimani, N, Sluijs, I, Spijkerman, A, Tagliabue, G, Teucher, B, Tjønneland, A, Tumino, R, Forouhi, N, Sharp, S, Langenberg, C, Feskens, E, Riboli, E, Wareham, N
Format: Journal article
Sprog:English
Udgivet: 2012
Beskrivelse
Summary:Background: In previous meta-analyses, tea consumption has been associated with lower incidence of type 2 diabetes. It is unclear, however, if tea is associated inversely over the entire range of intake. Therefore, we investigated the association between tea consumption and incidence of type 2 diabetes in a European population. Methodology/Principal Findings: The EPIC-InterAct case-cohort study was conducted in 26 centers in 8 European countries and consists of a total of 12,403 incident type 2 diabetes cases and a stratified subcohort of 16,835 individuals from a total cohort of 340,234 participants with 3.99 million person-years of follow-up. Country-specific Hazard Ratios (HR) for incidence of type 2 diabetes were obtained after adjustment for lifestyle and dietary factors using a Cox regression adapted for a case-cohort design. Subsequently, country-specific HR were combined using a random effects meta-analysis. Tea consumption was studied as categorical variable (0, >0-<1, 1-<4, ≥4 cups/day). The dose-response of the association was further explored by restricted cubic spline regression. Country specific medians of tea consumption ranged from 0 cups/day in Spain to 4 cups/day in United Kingdom. Tea consumption was associated inversely with incidence of type 2 diabetes; the HR was 0.84 [95%CI 0.71, 1.00] when participants who drank ≥4 cups of tea per day were compared with non-drinkers (plinear trend = 0.04). Incidence of type 2 diabetes already tended to be lower with tea consumption of 1-<4 cups/day (HR = 0.93 [95%CI 0.81, 1.05]). Spline regression did not suggest a non-linear association (pnon-linearity = 0.20). Conclusions/Significance: A linear inverse association was observed between tea consumption and incidence of type 2 diabetes. People who drink at least 4 cups of tea per day may have a 16% lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes than non-tea drinkers. © 2012 van Woudenbergh, The InterAct Consortium.