BrooklynDodger(s) comments: The Dodger(s) was(were) distinctly unaware that higher alcohol consumption was associated with lower prospective diabetes risk. The rest of this abstract is very confusing, it reads like it was written in the opposite direction.
American Journal of Epidemiology 2009 170(1):37-45; doi:10.1093/aje/kwp096
Confounding by Dietary Patterns of the Inverse Association Between Alcohol Consumption and Type 2 Diabetes Risk
Fumiaki Imamura, Alice H. Lichtenstein, Gerard E. Dallal, James B. Meigs and Paul F. Jacques Correspondence to Dr. Paul F. Jacques, Jean Mayer US Department of Agriculture Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging, 711 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02111 (e-mail: paul.jacques@tufts.edu).
Received for publication November 14, 2008. Accepted for publication March 25, 2009.
The ability to interpret epidemiologic observations is limited
because of potential residual confounding by correlated dietary
components. Dietary pattern analyses by factor analysis or partial
least squares may overcome the limitation. To examine confounding
by dietary pattern as well as standard risk factors and selected
nutrients, the authors modeled the longitudinal association
between alcohol consumption and 7-year risk of type 2 diabetes
mellitus in 2,879 healthy adults enrolled in the Framingham
Offspring Study (1991–2001) by Cox proportional hazard
models. A
fter adjustment for standard risk factors, consumers of
9.0 drinks/week had a significantly lower risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus compared with abstainers (hazard ratio = 0.47, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.27, 0.81). Adjustment for selected nutrients had little effect on the hazard ratio, whereas adjustment for dietary pattern variables by factor analysis significantly shifted the hazard ratio away from null (hazard ratio = 0.33, 95% CI: 0.17, 0.64) by 40.0% (95% CI: 16.8, 57.0; P = 0.002). Dietary pattern variables by partial least squares showed similar
results. Therefore, the observed inverse association, consistent
with past studies, was confounded by dietary patterns, and this
confounding was not captured by individual nutrient adjustment.
The data suggest that alcohol intake, not dietary patterns associated with alcohol intake, is responsible for the observed inverse association with type 2 diabetes mellitus risk.
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