Toenail Selenium and Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes in U.S. Men and Women

Diabetes Care
Q1
May 2012
Citations:107
Influential Citations:4
Observational Studies (Human)
80
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Methods
Two prospective U.S. cohorts: Nurses' Health Study (NHS) among women (n=3,630; mean age 52.6 ± 6.4 years) and Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) among men (n=3,535; mean age 59.6 ± 8.8 years). All participants were free of prevalent type 2 diabetes and heart disease at baseline (NHS 1982–1983; HPFS 1986–1987). Toenail selenium measured by neutron activation analysis; incident type 2 diabetes identified by biennial questionnaires and validated with a supplementary questionnaire; follow-up through 2008. Hazard ratios estimated with Cox proportional hazards models adjusting for demographic, lifestyle, geographic region, and dietary factors.
Results
Higher toenail selenium levels were associated with lower risk of incident type 2 diabetes in both cohorts. Pooled multivariable relative risks across selenium quintiles: 1.0 (reference), 0.91 (95% CI 0.73-1.14), 0.78 (0.62-0.99), 0.72 (0.57-0.91), 0.76 (0.60-0.97); P for trend = 0.01. Results were similar after excluding Se supplement users. Semiparametric analyses suggested a linear inverse relationship between toenail Se and T2DM risk. Conclusion: At dietary levels, higher toenail Se (dietary selenium exposure) is associated with a lower incidence of T2DM among generally healthy U.S. men and women. Higher-dose Se supplementation did not show clear benefits in prior trials; more research is needed to clarify dose, source, and population effects.
Limitations
Limitations include limited generalizability to non-Caucasian populations or lower-SES groups; toenail Se reflects long-term exposure but is not a direct intake measure; potential residual confounding; exposure assessed only at baseline with possible changes over time; observational design cannot establish causality.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Compelling biological pathways suggest that selenium (Se) may lower onset of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), but very few studies have evaluated this relationship, with mixed results. We examined the association between toenail Se and inci...