Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases: A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases : A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort. / Rubin, Katrine Hass; Rasmussen, Nathalie Fogh; Petersen, Inge; Kopp, Tine Iskov; Stenager, Egon; Magyari, Melinda; Hetland, Merete Lund; Bygum, Anette; Glintborg, Bente; Andersen, Vibeke.

In: International Journal of Medical Sciences, Vol. 17, No. 16, 2020, p. 2487-2495.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rubin, KH, Rasmussen, NF, Petersen, I, Kopp, TI, Stenager, E, Magyari, M, Hetland, ML, Bygum, A, Glintborg, B & Andersen, V 2020, 'Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases: A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort', International Journal of Medical Sciences, vol. 17, no. 16, pp. 2487-2495. https://doi.org/10.7150/ijms.49314

APA

Rubin, K. H., Rasmussen, N. F., Petersen, I., Kopp, T. I., Stenager, E., Magyari, M., Hetland, M. L., Bygum, A., Glintborg, B., & Andersen, V. (2020). Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases: A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort. International Journal of Medical Sciences, 17(16), 2487-2495. https://doi.org/10.7150/ijms.49314

Vancouver

Rubin KH, Rasmussen NF, Petersen I, Kopp TI, Stenager E, Magyari M et al. Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases: A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort. International Journal of Medical Sciences. 2020;17(16):2487-2495. https://doi.org/10.7150/ijms.49314

Author

Rubin, Katrine Hass ; Rasmussen, Nathalie Fogh ; Petersen, Inge ; Kopp, Tine Iskov ; Stenager, Egon ; Magyari, Melinda ; Hetland, Merete Lund ; Bygum, Anette ; Glintborg, Bente ; Andersen, Vibeke. / Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases : A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort. In: International Journal of Medical Sciences. 2020 ; Vol. 17, No. 16. pp. 2487-2495.

Bibtex

@article{138083dc215549f2af2aa26e8af3762a,
title = "Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases: A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort",
abstract = "Background: Human and animal studies support the involvement of diet in the development of CID-chronic inflammatory diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and multiple sclerosis. Objective: This cohort study aimed to investigate the association between intake of fibre, red and processed meat, and occurrence of late-onset CID (50+ years of age) in the DCH: Danish Diet, Cancer and Health cohort. We hypothesised that risk of late-onset CID would be lower among those with high intake of fibre and/or low intake of meat compared to individuals with low fibre and/or high meat intake. Methods: The DCH recruited 56,468 individuals, aged 50-64 years, between 1993 and 1997. At recruitment, diet intake was registered using food frequency questionnaires as well as lifestyle factors in 56,075 persons. Exposure variables were generated as sex-adjusted tertiles of fibre and meat (g/day). Development of CIDs was identified in national registries. Hazard ratios (HR) of late-onset CIDs (adjusted for age, sex, energy intake, alcohol, smoking, education, comorbidity, and civil status) were estimated for all three exposure variables. Results: During follow-up of 1,123,754 years (median (Interquartile range) = 22.2 (20.1-23.1)), 1,758 (3.1%) participants developed at least one CID. The adjusted HRs for developing CID (low fibre 1.04 [0.89-1.22] and medium fibre 1.04 [0.91-1.18] (high fibre as reference), and medium meat 0.96 [0.86-1.09] and high meat 0.94 [0.82-1.07] (low meat as reference)) or the individual diseases were not statistically significant. Conclusion: This large study did not support that a high intake of fibre and/or a low intake of meat had a high impact on the risk of late-onset CID.",
keywords = "Chronic inflammatory diseases, Dietary fibre, Processed meat, Red meat",
author = "Rubin, {Katrine Hass} and Rasmussen, {Nathalie Fogh} and Inge Petersen and Kopp, {Tine Iskov} and Egon Stenager and Melinda Magyari and Hetland, {Merete Lund} and Anette Bygum and Bente Glintborg and Vibeke Andersen",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.7150/ijms.49314",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "2487--2495",
journal = "International Journal of Medical Sciences",
issn = "1449-1907",
publisher = "Ivyspring International Publisher",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Intake of dietary fibre, red and processed meat and risk of late-onset chronic inflammatory diseases

T2 - A prospective Danish study on the “diet, cancer and health” cohort

AU - Rubin, Katrine Hass

AU - Rasmussen, Nathalie Fogh

AU - Petersen, Inge

AU - Kopp, Tine Iskov

AU - Stenager, Egon

AU - Magyari, Melinda

AU - Hetland, Merete Lund

AU - Bygum, Anette

AU - Glintborg, Bente

AU - Andersen, Vibeke

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Background: Human and animal studies support the involvement of diet in the development of CID-chronic inflammatory diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and multiple sclerosis. Objective: This cohort study aimed to investigate the association between intake of fibre, red and processed meat, and occurrence of late-onset CID (50+ years of age) in the DCH: Danish Diet, Cancer and Health cohort. We hypothesised that risk of late-onset CID would be lower among those with high intake of fibre and/or low intake of meat compared to individuals with low fibre and/or high meat intake. Methods: The DCH recruited 56,468 individuals, aged 50-64 years, between 1993 and 1997. At recruitment, diet intake was registered using food frequency questionnaires as well as lifestyle factors in 56,075 persons. Exposure variables were generated as sex-adjusted tertiles of fibre and meat (g/day). Development of CIDs was identified in national registries. Hazard ratios (HR) of late-onset CIDs (adjusted for age, sex, energy intake, alcohol, smoking, education, comorbidity, and civil status) were estimated for all three exposure variables. Results: During follow-up of 1,123,754 years (median (Interquartile range) = 22.2 (20.1-23.1)), 1,758 (3.1%) participants developed at least one CID. The adjusted HRs for developing CID (low fibre 1.04 [0.89-1.22] and medium fibre 1.04 [0.91-1.18] (high fibre as reference), and medium meat 0.96 [0.86-1.09] and high meat 0.94 [0.82-1.07] (low meat as reference)) or the individual diseases were not statistically significant. Conclusion: This large study did not support that a high intake of fibre and/or a low intake of meat had a high impact on the risk of late-onset CID.

AB - Background: Human and animal studies support the involvement of diet in the development of CID-chronic inflammatory diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and multiple sclerosis. Objective: This cohort study aimed to investigate the association between intake of fibre, red and processed meat, and occurrence of late-onset CID (50+ years of age) in the DCH: Danish Diet, Cancer and Health cohort. We hypothesised that risk of late-onset CID would be lower among those with high intake of fibre and/or low intake of meat compared to individuals with low fibre and/or high meat intake. Methods: The DCH recruited 56,468 individuals, aged 50-64 years, between 1993 and 1997. At recruitment, diet intake was registered using food frequency questionnaires as well as lifestyle factors in 56,075 persons. Exposure variables were generated as sex-adjusted tertiles of fibre and meat (g/day). Development of CIDs was identified in national registries. Hazard ratios (HR) of late-onset CIDs (adjusted for age, sex, energy intake, alcohol, smoking, education, comorbidity, and civil status) were estimated for all three exposure variables. Results: During follow-up of 1,123,754 years (median (Interquartile range) = 22.2 (20.1-23.1)), 1,758 (3.1%) participants developed at least one CID. The adjusted HRs for developing CID (low fibre 1.04 [0.89-1.22] and medium fibre 1.04 [0.91-1.18] (high fibre as reference), and medium meat 0.96 [0.86-1.09] and high meat 0.94 [0.82-1.07] (low meat as reference)) or the individual diseases were not statistically significant. Conclusion: This large study did not support that a high intake of fibre and/or a low intake of meat had a high impact on the risk of late-onset CID.

KW - Chronic inflammatory diseases

KW - Dietary fibre

KW - Processed meat

KW - Red meat

U2 - 10.7150/ijms.49314

DO - 10.7150/ijms.49314

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33029091

AN - SCOPUS:85091292034

VL - 17

SP - 2487

EP - 2495

JO - International Journal of Medical Sciences

JF - International Journal of Medical Sciences

SN - 1449-1907

IS - 16

ER -

ID: 253140842