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Diabetes mellitus has become a major public health epidemic, affecting more than 250 million individuals worldwide in 2008, increasing to 380 million in 2025. Each year 3.8 million deaths are attributable to diabetes. An even greater number die of cardiovascular disease made worse by diabetes-related lipid disorders and hypertension (1).
Type 2 diabetes is much more common than type 1 diabetes, and accounts for approximately 90 percent of all diabetes worldwide (2). Type 1 diabetes is characterized by a lack of production of insulin in the body, whereas type 2 diabetes is due to the body's diminished insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells and the resistance of tissues to insulin (3).
To assess the effectiveness (extent to which an intervention works in daily medical practice) of the use of phytosterol/phytostanol-enriched margarines to lower total and non-HDL cholesterol levels in users and non-users of statins.
Design
Retrospective cohort study.
Setting
Data were obtained from questionnaires on health and food intake from a population-based longitudinal cohort linked to pharmacy-dispensing records.
Subjects
The analysis included 3829 men and women (aged 31–71 years) who were examined during 1998–2002 and re-examined at 5-year follow-up during 2003–2007.
Results
Recommended doses of margarines were consumed by only 9 % of the subjects. Serum total cholesterol decreased by respectively −0·16 (95 % CI −0·26, −0·05) mmol/l, −1·40 (95 % CI −1·51, −1·30) mmol/l and −1·64 (95 % CI −1·91, −1·37) mmol/l in subjects who started to use phytosterols/phytostanols only, statins only or a combination of both compounds at some point in time between examination and re-examination, compared with subjects who did not start using phytosterols/phytostanols or statins. Cholesterol-lowering effects of the phytosterols/phytostanols were similar in statin users and statin non-users and increased with increasing intake of enriched margarine (no intake, 0; low intake, −0·017 (95 % CI −0·16, 0·13) mmol/l; medium intake, −0·089 (95 % CI −0·22, 0·038) mmol/l; high intake, −0·32 (95 % CI −0·50, −0·14) mmol/l).
Conclusions
Although recommended intake levels of the enriched margarines were not reached by all persons, these data show that under customary conditions of use phytosterols/phytostanols are effective in lowering cholesterol levels in both statin users and non-users.
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