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Adipose tissue trans-fatty acids and changes in body weight and waist circumference

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2013

Camilla P. Hansen*
Affiliation:
Section for Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 2, DK-8000Aarhus C, Denmark Department of Cardiology, Center for Cardiovascular Research, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark Institute of Preventive Medicine, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, The Capital Region, Copenhagen, Denmark
Tina L. Berentzen
Affiliation:
Institute of Preventive Medicine, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, The Capital Region, Copenhagen, Denmark
Jane N. Østergaard
Affiliation:
Section for Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 2, DK-8000Aarhus C, Denmark Department of Cardiology, Center for Cardiovascular Research, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark
Christina C. Dahm
Affiliation:
Section for Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 2, DK-8000Aarhus C, Denmark
Lars I. Hellgren
Affiliation:
Department of Systems Biology, Center for Biological Sequence Analysis, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark
Erik B. Schmidt
Affiliation:
Department of Cardiology, Center for Cardiovascular Research, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark
Anne Tjønneland
Affiliation:
Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark
Thorkild I. A. Sørensen
Affiliation:
Institute of Preventive Medicine, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, The Capital Region, Copenhagen, Denmark Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
Kim Overvad
Affiliation:
Section for Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 2, DK-8000Aarhus C, Denmark Department of Cardiology, Center for Cardiovascular Research, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark
Marianne U. Jakobsen
Affiliation:
Section for Epidemiology, Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 2, DK-8000Aarhus C, Denmark
*
*Corresponding author: C. P. Hansen, fax +45 3816 3119, email cph@soci.au.dk
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Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that the intake of trans-fatty acids (TFA) plays a role in the development of obesity. The proportions of adipose tissue fatty acids not synthesised endogenously in humans, such as TFA, usually correlate well with the dietary intake. Hence, the use of these biomarkers may provide a more accurate measure of habitual TFA intake than that obtained with dietary questionnaires. The objective of the present study was to investigate the associations between the proportions of specific TFA in adipose tissue and subsequent changes in weight and waist circumference (WC). The relative content of fatty acids in adipose tissue biopsies from a random sample of 996 men and women aged 50–64 years drawn from a Danish cohort study was determined by GC. Baseline data on weight, WC and potential confounders were available together with information on weight and WC 5 years after enrolment. The exposure measures were total trans-octadecenoic acids (18 : 1t), 18 : 1 Δ6-10t, vaccenic acid (18 : 1 Δ11t) and rumenic acid (18 : 2 Δ9c, 11t). Data were analysed using multiple regression with cubic spline modelling. The median proportion of total adipose tissue 18 : 1t was 1·52 % (90 % central range 0·98, 2·19) in men and 1·47 % (1·01, 2·19) in women. No significant associations were observed between the proportions of total 18 : 1t, 18 : 1 Δ6-10t, vaccenic acid or rumenic acid and changes in weight or WC. The present study suggests that the proportions of specific TFA in adipose tissue are not associated with subsequent changes in weight or WC within the exposure range observed in this population.

Type
Full Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2013 

Previous studies have suggested that trans-fatty acids (TFA) play a role in the development of obesity( Reference Thompson, Minihane and Williams 1 ). TFA are unsaturated fatty acids with at least one double bond in the trans-configuration, and they are formed either by industrial hydrogenation or by biohydrogenation in ruminants. TFA from both industrial and ruminant sources mainly contain trans-isomers of octadecenoic acid (18 : 1), but the distribution of isomers differs between the two sources( Reference Stender, Astrup and Dyerberg 2 ). In industrially partially hydrogenated oils, elaidic acid (18 : 1 Δ9t) is the most abundant TFA, but 18 : 1 Δ10t is also present in relatively large amounts. In contrast, dairy and meat products from ruminants mainly contain vaccenic acid (18 : 1 Δ11t). In addition, rumenic acid (18 : 2 Δ9c, 11t), an isomer of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), is present in TFA from ruminant sources. Vaccenic acid can also be converted into rumenic acid endogenously in humans( Reference Turpeinen, Mutanen and Aro 3 , Reference Haug, Hostmark and Harstad 4 ). Several animal studies have shown that feeding CLA reduces body weight and fat depositions, but the results from human studies are inconsistent( Reference Gebauer, Psota and Kris-Etherton 5 , Reference Wang and Jones 6 ).

Positive associations between total reported intake of TFA and changes in weight and waist circumference (WC) have been found by two large American cohort studies( Reference Field, Willett and Lissner 7 , Reference Koh-Banerjee, Chu and Spiegelman 8 ). In a previous study, we observed a weak inverse association of ruminant TFA intake with weight change, but not with WC change( Reference Hansen, Berentzen and Halkjaer 9 ). A cross-sectional study of the associations between adipose tissue TFA and different anthropometric measures has suggested that the individual TFA may have divergent effects on adiposity( Reference Smit, Willett and Campos 10 ).

Biomarkers of the dietary intake of TFA may provide a more accurate measure of habitual TFA intake than that obtained with dietary questionnaires( Reference Tjonneland, Overvad and Thorling 11 ). The content of fatty acids in adipose tissue reflects the dietary intake of fatty acids during the last couple of years( Reference Arner, Bernard and Salehpour 12 ), and the proportions of adipose tissue fatty acids not synthesised endogenously in humans, such as TFA, tend to correlate well with the reported habitual dietary intake( Reference Hodson, Skeaff and Fielding 13 , Reference Willett 14 ).

In epidemiological studies of TFA and CVD, the intake of TFA from industrial sources has been shown to be associated with higher risks, whereas that of TFA from ruminant sources did not exhibit such an association( Reference Bendsen, Christensen and Bartels 15 , Reference Mozaffarian, Katan and Ascherio 16 ). This may be due to different biological effects of specific TFA isomers or to a threshold effect of TFA, since TFA of industrial origin are usually consumed in much greater amounts than TFA from ruminant sources.

The aim of the present study was to investigate the associations between the proportions of specific TFA in adipose tissue and subsequent changes in body weight and WC.

Materials and methods

Study population and design

From December 1993 to May 1997, all men and women, born in Denmark, aged 50–64 years, living in the greater Aarhus or Copenhagen areas, and with no previous cancer diagnosis registered in the Danish Cancer Registry were invited to participate in the Danish Diet, Cancer and Health study (n 160 725). In total, 57 053 (35 %) participants were recruited, and for the present study, a random sample of 1869 cohort members was drawn using simple random sampling.

At baseline, the participants completed a FFQ about their dietary intake during the previous year and a self-administered questionnaire about lifestyle and sociodemographic factors and health. The participants underwent a physical examination at the study clinics in Aarhus or Copenhagen, and biological samples were collected. Follow-up information was collected through postal questionnaires between September 1999 and October 2002. The Danish Data Protection Agency and the regional Ethics Committee approved the study, which was in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration II, and the participants gave written consent before enrolment in the study. The study design and measurement procedures have been described in detail elsewhere( Reference Tjonneland, Olsen and Boll 17 ).

Adipose tissue analysis

A 35–50 mg adipose tissue biopsy was taken from the buttocks of the participants at enrolment using a luer-lock system (Terumo, Terumo Corporation) consisting of a needle, a Venoject multisample luer adaptor and an evacuated blood tube, according to the method of Beynen & Katan( Reference Beynen and Katan 18 ), and stored in liquid N2 vapour (maximum − 150°C) in the original needle and sample adapter until analysis. The biopsies taken from participants in the random sample were thawed, and approximately 2–4 mg were put into a glass and prewarmed at 50°C for 10 min. Subsequently, the fat was dissolved in heptane at 50°C, and the fatty acids were transesterified using 2 m-KOH in methanol at 50°C for 2 min, according to International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) Standard Methods for Analysis of Oils, Fats and Derivatives. The composition of fatty acids was analysed by GC using a Varian 3900 GC with a CP-8400 autosampler (Varian) equipped with a flame ionisation detector. Split injection mode (injector temperature 280°C and split ratio 1:20), a CP-sil 88, 60 m × 0·25 mm internal diameter capillary column (Varian), temperature programming from 90 to 210°C, increasing with 6°C/min, and constant flow were used. Helium was used as the carrier gas. Commercially available standards (Nu-chek-Prep, Inc.) were used to identify the individual fatty acids. This approach permits the quantification of fatty acid methyl esters with twelve to twenty-four carbon atoms and the separation and quantification of several TFA. The content of fatty acids is expressed as percentages of total fatty acids (wt%). The following specific TFA were determined: trans-6 (+trans-8)-18 : 1 (18 : 1 Δ6t(+Δ8t)); trans-9-18 : 1 (18 : 1 Δ9t) (elaidic acid); trans-10-18 : 1 (18 : 1 Δ10t); trans-11-18 : 1 (18 : 1 Δ11t) (vaccenic acid); cis-9, trans-11-18 : 2 (18 : 2 Δ9c, 11t) (rumenic acid). The inter-assay CV for the determination of the trans-18 : 1 positional isomers were between 3·7 % (elaidic acid) and 7·1 % (vaccenic acid), and the inter-assay CV for the determination of rumenic acid was 2·9 %.

The fatty acids 18 : 1 Δ6t(+Δ8t), 18 : 1 Δ9t and 18 : 1 Δ10t share the same main dietary source (industrially partially hydrogenated oils), and the pairwise correlations between them were between 0·90 and 0·92. Therefore, we decided to merge these positional TFA isomers into one exposure category labelled 18 : 1 Δ6-10t. In contrast, the main dietary source for the fatty acid 18 : 1 Δ11t is ruminant products, and the correlations between this fatty acid and the other 18 : 1 trans-isomers were much lower (0·42–0·55). Total trans-18 : 1 (18 : 1t) was defined as 18 : 1 Δ6-10t+18 : 1 Δ11t.

Anthropometric measures

Baseline measurements of height, weight and WC were taken by laboratory technicians. Height was measured with the participants standing without shoes and recorded to the nearest 0·5 cm, and weight was measured with a digital scale with the participants wearing light underwear and recorded to the nearest 100 g. WC was measured at the narrowest circumference between the lower rib and the iliac crest (the natural waist) or, if waist narrowing was indeterminable, halfway between the lower rib and the iliac crest and recorded to the nearest 0·5 cm. Follow-up weight and WC were self-reported. A measuring tape was provided with the postal questionnaires and the participants were instructed to measure their WC at the umbilicus level.

The outcomes in the present study were defined as average annual changes in body weight and WC, which were calculated by subtracting the baseline values from the follow-up values and dividing these differences by the duration of follow-up time. In addition, we studied changes in WC for given changes in BMI (WCBMI) defined as a linear regression model with change in WC as the outcome and concurrent change in BMI included as a covariate. Similarly, we also studied changes in weight adjusted for concurrent changes in WC (WeightWC).

Exclusion criteria

Participants who had incomplete questionnaires with multiple errors and participants for whom data on follow-up time, adipose tissue TFA, weight, WC or any of the potential confounders were missing were excluded (Fig. 1). Furthermore, participants with relative changes in weight or WC below the sex-specific 1st percentile or above the 99th percentile were excluded due to potential measurement errors. Individuals diagnosed with chronic diseases might change their dietary habits and there may be alterations in their body composition as a result of these changes or as a result of the disease itself. Therefore, participants who had one of the following chronic diseases at baseline or at follow-up were excluded: cancer; CVD; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; diabetes. Diagnoses of cancer were identified by record linkage to the Danish Cancer Registry( Reference Gjerstorff 19 ). Diagnoses of CVD and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were identified by record linkage to the Danish National Patient Registry( Reference Andersen, Madsen and Jorgensen 20 ). For diabetes, diagnoses were either self-reported or identified by record linkage to the Danish National Diabetes Register( Reference Carstensen, Kristensen and Ottosen 21 ).

Fig. 1 Flow chart of the study population. TFA, trans-fatty acids.

Statistical analyses

The associations between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and average annual changes in weight, WC, WCBMI and WeightWC were studied using multiple linear regression. Analyses were carried out for all the participants and separately for each sex. The following variables were included as covariates in the model: sex; age; baseline BMI; change in BMI (only in the analysis of change in WCBMI); baseline WC (only in the analyses of changes in WC, WCBMI and WeightWC); change in WC (only in the analysis of change in WeightWC); smoking (never, former, current < 15 g/d, current 15–25 g/d, current >25 g/d); alcohol intake (g/d); sports activity (h/week); education (7 years or less, 8–10 years, more than 10 years); menopausal status (in women; pre, post, unknown); current use of hormone replacement therapy (in women; yes, no). The fatty acid variables 18 : 1 Δ6-10t, 18 : 1 Δ11t and 18 : 2 Δ9c, 11t were also analysed in a mutually adjusted model containing the potential confounders included in the main model.

All the continuous covariates were included as restricted cubic splines with three knots at the 10th, 50th and 90th percentiles( Reference Harrell 22 , Reference Greenland 23 ). The data were modelled using restricted cubic splines to be able to observe non-linear and threshold effects of TFA. Associations were considered to be significant if at least one of the spline parameters differed significantly from zero assessed by the Wald test. The associations between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and changes in anthropometry were considered to be non-linear if the last spline parameter differed significantly from zero assessed by the Wald test. If the test of non-linearity was rejected, linear regression coefficients for the associations between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and changes in anthropometry were provided. Two-sided P values below 0·05 were considered to be statistically significant.

Effect modification by sex was formally tested using a likelihood ratio test of nested models with and without the relevant product terms. The observed associations in men and women did not differ substantially, and none of the tests was statistically significant. Therefore, only results from the analyses of all the participants are presented.

Residual v. fitted plots were used to check the assumption of homogeneity of variance. Histograms and P–P plots of the residuals for each model were used to check the assumption of normally distributed error terms. No violations were found.

Data analyses were carried out using the Stata statistical software, version 11.2 (Stata Corporation).

Results

A flow chart of the study population is shown in Fig. 1. Among the 1869 subjects sampled at baseline, twelve were later excluded due to a cancer diagnosis before recruitment, which, due to processing delays, had not been registered in the Danish Cancer Registry at the time of invitation. Between baseline and follow-up, seventy individuals died or were lost to follow-up and 289 individuals did not respond or did not wish to participate at the follow-up. Among the 1498 participants who participated at follow-up, exclusions were made according to the criteria described earlier. This left 996 subjects free from major illnesses and with complete data on exposures, outcomes and potential confounders to be included in the analyses.

The characteristics of the study participants are given in Table 1. The median proportion of total adipose tissue 18 : 1t was 1·52 % (90 % central range 0·98, 2·19) in men and 1·47 % (90 % central range 1·01, 2·19) in women. The median annual weight change was 73 g (90 % central range − 1151, 1288) in men and − 19 g (90 % central range − 1253, 1098) in women, whereas the median annual WC change was 0·6 cm (90 % central range − 1·2, 2·3) in men and 1·3 cm (90 % central range − 0·8, 3·5) in women.

Table 1 Characteristics of the study population (Median values with 5th and 95th percentiles)

WC, waist circumference; TFA, trans-fatty acids; HRT, hormone replacement therapy.

Change in weight

No significant associations were observed between the adipose tissue levels of total 18 : 1t or 18 : 1 Δ6-10t and changes in weight (P= 0·11 and P= 0·10, respectively) (Fig. 2). Similarly, no significant results were obtained for vaccenic acid or rumenic acid (P= 0·48 and P= 0·46, respectively) (Fig. 2). The analysis of 18 : 1 Δ6-10t, vaccenic acid and rumenic acid in a mutually adjusted model did not change the observed associations substantially (data not shown). None of the tests of non-linearity was statistically significant, and linear regression coefficients for the associations between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and changes in weight are given in Table 2.

Fig. 2 Proportion of adipose tissue trans-fatty acids and average annual change in body weight. The solid lines are the exposure variables modelled with restricted cubic splines with three knots and the shaded areas are the 95 % CI. Adjustments: sex; age; baseline BMI; smoking; alcohol intake; sports activity; education; menopausal status (only women); current use of hormone replacement therapy (only women). P values from the test of association: (a) total trans-18 : 1 (P= 0·11); (b) 18 : 1Δ6-10t (P= 0·10); (c) vaccenic acid (P= 0·48); (d) rumenic acid (P= 0·46).

Table 2 Linear associations between the proportions of adipose tissue trans-fatty acids (TFA, % of fatty acids) and changes in weight (kg/year) and waist circumference (cm/year) (β-Coefficients and 95 % confidence intervals)

* β-coefficient for 1 % point difference in the percentage of TFA in adipose tissue. Adjustments: sex; age; baseline BMI; baseline waist circumference (WC, only in the analysis of WC change); smoking; alcohol intake; sports activity; education; menopausal status (only women); current use of hormone replacement therapy (only women).

Changes in weight adjusted for concurrent changes in waist circumference

Neither the adipose tissue level of total 18 : 1t nor that of any of the specific TFA was significantly associated with changes in WeightWC (Fig. S1 and Table S1, available online).

Change in waist circumference

No significant associations were observed between the adipose tissue levels of total 18 : 1t, 18 : 1 Δ6-10t, vaccenic acid or rumenic acid and changes in WC (P values: 0·63, 0·68, 0·58 and 0·66) (Fig. 3). The analysis of the specific TFA in a mutually adjusted model did not change the observed associations substantially (data not shown). None of the tests of non-linearity was statistically significant, and linear regression coefficients for the associations between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and change in WC are given in Table 2.

Fig. 3 Proportions of adipose tissue trans-fatty acids and average annual change in waist circumference. The solid lines are the exposure variables modelled with restricted cubic splines with three knots and the shaded areas are the 95 % CI. Adjustments: sex; age; baseline BMI; baseline waist circumference; smoking; alcohol intake; sports activity; education; menopausal status (only women); current use of hormone replacement therapy (only women). P values from the test of association: (a) total trans-18 : 1 (P= 0·63); (b) 18 : 1 Δ6-10t (P= 0·68); (c) vaccenic acid (P= 0·58); (d) rumenic acid (P= 0·66).

Changes in waist circumference adjusted for concurrent changes in BMI

Neither the adipose tissue level of total 18 : 1t nor that of any of the specific TFA was significantly associated with changes in WCBMI (Fig. S2 and Table S1, available online).

Discussion

In the present study, the proportions of TFA in adipose tissue did not predict subsequent changes in anthropometry.

The study population was a random sample of the Danish Diet, Cancer and Health cohort. Loss to follow-up was mainly due to non-response. Non-participants at follow-up did not differ from the participants with regard to age and adipose tissue levels of TFA, but non-participants tended to have slightly higher baseline BMI and WC than the participants. Thus, non-response may be related to changes in anthropometry, but not to both the exposure to TFA and changes in anthropometry. Therefore, selection bias is of limited concern.

The proportions of adipose tissue fatty acids not synthesised endogenously in humans, such as TFA, are considered as biomarkers of the dietary intake from the past several months to more than a year( Reference Hodson, Skeaff and Fielding 13 , Reference Cantwell 24 ). Thus, the proportions of TFA in adipose tissue are an objective measure of long-term endogenous exposure to TFA. Published correlation coefficients between TFA intake (as percentage of total fat) estimated from FFQ and the proportion of adipose tissue TFA have varied from 0·29 to 0·67( Reference Hunter, Rimm and Sacks 25 Reference Lemaitre, King and Patterson 29 ). In the present study, the median proportion of adipose tissue elaidic acid was 0·55 %, whereas that of vaccenic acid was 0·31 %, indicating that the main dietary source of TFA in the study population was industrially partially hydrogenated oils at the time the adipose tissue biopsies were collected. The intake of TFA from industrial sources declined from 2·2 g/d in 1992 to 0·4 g/d in 1999 in the Danish population( Reference Leth, Jensen and Mikkelsen 30 ). In 2004, a restriction on the content of industrially produced TFA in fats was imposed in Denmark, and as a result, TFA from industrial sources no longer contribute substantially to the intake of TFA in the Danish population( Reference Leth, Jensen and Mikkelsen 30 ). Although a change in dietary intake during follow-up is expected to cause changes in the proportions of specific TFA in adipose tissue, the study participants are presumed to be ranked correctly according to their TFA exposure. The adipose tissue biopsies were sampled from the buttocks of the participants in the present study. The composition of fatty acids in adipose tissue varies between depots( Reference Hodson, Skeaff and Fielding 13 ), and in a study conducted among children, a higher content of TFA has been observed in abdominal fat depots than in buttock fat depots( Reference Mamalakis, Kafatos and Manios 31 ). However, the reported differences in the composition of fatty acids between fat depots are rather small( Reference Hodson, Skeaff and Fielding 13 , Reference Mamalakis, Kafatos and Manios 31 ). Baseline anthropometric measures were obtained by trained staff, whereas follow-up weight and WC were self-reported. A validation study within the Diet, Cancer and Health cohort has shown that self-reported WC at the umbilicus level is usable as a proxy for technician-measured WC at the natural waist in regression analyses if baseline BMI and WC are included as covariates( Reference Bigaard, Spanggaard and Thomsen 32 ). An overall net weight loss was reported among women in the present study. This may be due to the age of the study population or due to under-reporting of follow-up weight. Most probably, the reporting of follow-up weight and WC was not related to the proportions of TFA in adipose tissue. Thus, systematic measurement errors are unlikely to have affected the results. However, random measurement errors could potentially have biased the results towards null.

Adjustment for potential confounders had no notable influence on the observed associations. Furthermore, adjusting for the continuous confounders using restricted cubic splines with five knots instead of three knots did not change the observed associations. Although residual confounding cannot be eliminated, these sensitivity analyses support that it may not be of major concern. However, confounders not taken into account may have affected the results. The metabolism of fatty acids and thus their concentrations in body tissue may be affected by lifestyle. A study of the adipose tissue content of 14 : 0, 15 : 0 and 17 : 0 as a biomarker of dairy fat intake has suggested that adjustments should be made for alcohol intake and physical activity when these fatty acids are used as biomarkers of dairy fat intake( Reference Rosell, Johansson and Berglund 33 ). This may also apply to adipose tissue TFA. In the present study, both alcohol intake and physical activity were included as covariates. Previous studies have found inverse associations between the proportions of 14 : 0, 15 : 0 and 17 : 0 in adipose tissue and weight, BMI and WC( Reference Biong, Veierod and Ringstad 34 Reference Smedman, Gustafsson and Berglund 36 ). However, further adjustment for 15 : 0 and 17 : 0 did not change the observed association for vaccenic acid (data not shown). The content of specific adipose tissue fatty acids is expressed as proportions of total adipose tissue fatty acids. When adjustment is made for other fatty acids, either as proportions in adipose tissue or as those from dietary intake, food sources contributing to variation in the specific TFA are restricted to food sources that do not contribute to variation in the fatty acids that are controlled for. Thus, mutual adjustment for several specific adipose tissue TFA takes into account possible confounding from individual TFA, but at the same time may change the interpretation of the model estimates.

In epidemiological studies of TFA and CVD, TFA from industrial sources have been shown to be associated with increased risks, whereas TFA from ruminant sources did not exhibit such an association( Reference Bendsen, Christensen and Bartels 15 , Reference Mozaffarian, Katan and Ascherio 16 ). This may be due to different biological effects of specific TFA or lower intake levels of TFA from ruminant sources. However, using cubic splines to model the associations between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and changes in anthropometry, no threshold was observed within the exposure range in the present study. Since none of the associations was significantly non-linear, we also performed linear regression analyses. These should be considered as post hoc analyses and the CI should be interpreted with reservations. However, all the linear correlation coefficients point in the same direction and do not indicate that specific TFA have different associations with changes in anthropometry.

The lack of an association between the proportions of adipose tissue TFA and changes in weight and WC in the present study is in contrast to previous findings of cohort studies using the dietary intake of TFA as an exposure variable( Reference Field, Willett and Lissner 7 Reference Hansen, Berentzen and Halkjaer 9 ). In a cross-sectional study carried out by Smit et al. ( Reference Smit, Willett and Campos 10 ), inverse associations were observed between total adipose tissue 18 : 1t and BMI and WC. The proportions of specific TFA in adipose tissue observed in the present study are similar to those reported by Smit et al. ( Reference Smit, Willett and Campos 10 ), and thus differences in exposure levels cannot explain the discrepancies between the two studies. However, different food sources of 18 : 1t in the Costa Rican and Danish populations may be part of the explanation, as confounding from other nutrients in the food sources contributing to the TFA intake cannot be excluded. The proportions of adipose tissue rumenic acid were not significantly associated with changes in weight or WC in the present study. In agreement with this, Smit et al. ( Reference Smit, Willett and Campos 10 ) did not find rumenic acid to be significantly associated with BMI or WC, although they did find a positive association between rumenic acid and skinfold thickness. Rumenic acid is an isomer of CLA, but, even though animal studies have shown that feeding CLA reduces body weight in rodents, evidence for an association between CLA consumption and body composition in humans has not been established( Reference Gebauer, Psota and Kris-Etherton 5 , Reference Wang and Jones 6 ). It was not possible to investigate the associations between non-conjugated trans-18 : 2 isomers and changes in weight and WC in the present study, but previously positive associations between these TFA and anthropometry have been reported in cross-sectional studies( Reference Smit, Willett and Campos 10 , Reference Lee, Lee and Park 37 ).

The associations between adipose tissue TFA and changes in anthropometry may depend on the size of the fat mass. Due to the rather small sample size in the present study, it was not possible to investigate the associations between the adipose tissue levels of TFA and changes in anthropometry across strata of fat mass measured as BMI and WC at baseline. Sex was considered as a potential effect modifier due to sex-related differences in the size of the fat mass. The findings of the present study, however, do not suggest systematical differences in the associations across sex strata.

Potential biological mechanisms to explain the association between TFA and obesity have not been identified( Reference Thompson, Minihane and Williams 1 ). It has been hypothesised that TFA may lead to abdominal obesity through impairment of insulin sensitivity( Reference Koh-Banerjee, Chu and Spiegelman 8 , Reference Kavanagh, Jones and Sawyer 38 ), but studies of TFA and insulin sensitivity have reported mixed results( Reference Micha and Mozaffarian 39 ). In a randomised cross-over trial of diets enriched with monounsaturated fat, saturated fat or TFA, higher fat oxidation has been observed after the consumption of a TFA diet( Reference Lovejoy, Smith and Champagne 40 ), while in another trial, energy expenditure and substrate oxidation did not differ after the consumption of a large dose of monounsaturated fat, polyunsaturated fat or TFA( Reference Flint, Helt and Raben 41 ).

In conclusion, this study suggests that neither the proportions of total 18 : 1t nor those of specific TFA in adipose tissue are associated with subsequent changes in weight or WC within the exposure range observed in the Danish population.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114513003747

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the Danish Cancer Society and the staff at the Diet, Cancer and Health study for the collection and administration of data.

The present study is part of the project Health Promoting Effect of Milk-Derived Products, which is supported by the Danish Council for Strategic Research (Contract 2101-08-0053) and the Danish Dairy Research Foundation, and part of the research program of the Danish Obesity Research Centre (DanORC, http://www.danorc.dk), which is supported by the Danish Council for Strategic Research (Contract 2101-06-0005). The Danish Council for Strategic Research and the Danish Dairy Research Foundation had no role in the design and analysis of the study or in the writing of this article.

The authors' contributions are as follows: C. P. H., K. O. and M. U. J. contributed to the study design; A. T. and K. O. collected the data; C. P. H. carried out the statistical analyses; C. P. H., T. L. B., J. N. Ø., C. C. D., L. I. H., E. B. S., A. T., T. I. A. S., K. O. and M. U. J. were involved in the interpretation of the data and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content; C. P. H. wrote the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

None of the authors has any conflicts of interest to declare.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1 Flow chart of the study population. TFA, trans-fatty acids.

Figure 1

Table 1 Characteristics of the study population (Median values with 5th and 95th percentiles)

Figure 2

Fig. 2 Proportion of adipose tissue trans-fatty acids and average annual change in body weight. The solid lines are the exposure variables modelled with restricted cubic splines with three knots and the shaded areas are the 95 % CI. Adjustments: sex; age; baseline BMI; smoking; alcohol intake; sports activity; education; menopausal status (only women); current use of hormone replacement therapy (only women). P values from the test of association: (a) total trans-18 : 1 (P= 0·11); (b) 18 : 1Δ6-10t (P= 0·10); (c) vaccenic acid (P= 0·48); (d) rumenic acid (P= 0·46).

Figure 3

Table 2 Linear associations between the proportions of adipose tissue trans-fatty acids (TFA, % of fatty acids) and changes in weight (kg/year) and waist circumference (cm/year) (β-Coefficients and 95 % confidence intervals)

Figure 4

Fig. 3 Proportions of adipose tissue trans-fatty acids and average annual change in waist circumference. The solid lines are the exposure variables modelled with restricted cubic splines with three knots and the shaded areas are the 95 % CI. Adjustments: sex; age; baseline BMI; baseline waist circumference; smoking; alcohol intake; sports activity; education; menopausal status (only women); current use of hormone replacement therapy (only women). P values from the test of association: (a) total trans-18 : 1 (P= 0·63); (b) 18 : 1 Δ6-10t (P= 0·68); (c) vaccenic acid (P= 0·58); (d) rumenic acid (P= 0·66).

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