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. 2017 May 23;186(7):824–833. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwx156

Table 3.

Hazard Ratios for of Incident Type 2 Diabetes According to Intake of Heme Iron, the Singapore Chinese Health Study, 1993–2010

Iron Type and Model Quartile of Iron Intake
1 4
No. of Cases No. of Person Years Median HR 95% CI No. of Cases No. of Person Years Median HR 95% CI P for Trenda
Heme iron 1,181 124,549 0.21 1,446 124,505 0.64
 Model 1b 1.00 Referent 1.24 1.15, 1.34 <0.001
 Model 2c 1.00 Referent 1.24 1.14, 1.34 <0.001
 Model 3d 1.00 Referent 1.23 1.13, 1.34 <0.001
 Model 3d with poultry and fish 1.00 Referent 1.23 1.09, 1.38 0.001
 Model 3d with red meat 1.00 Referent 1.14 1.02, 1.28 0.034
Nonheme iron 1,347 127,128 6.07 1,295 120,180 9.38
 Model 1b 1.00 Referent 1.04 0.96, 1.12 0.454
 Model 2c 1.00 Referent 1.02 0.94, 1.11 0.770
 Model 3d 1.00 Referent 0.94 0.83, 1.06 0.256
 Model 3d with poultry and fish 1.00 Referent 0.96 0.85, 1.08 0.436
 Model 3d with red meat 1.00 Referent 0.97 0.86, 1.09 0.556

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.

a Linear trend was tested by treating the median intake values of quartiles as continuous variables using Cox proportional hazards models.

b Adjusted for age, sex, dialect, year of interview, and educational level.

c Adjusted for the variables in model 1 and body mass index, physical activity level, smoking status, alcohol use, baseline history of self-reported hypertension, adherence to the vegetable-, fruit-, and soy-rich dietary pattern, and total energy intake.

d Adjusted for the variables in model 2 (except for dietary patterns) and dietary intakes of egg, soy, nonsoy legumes, vegetables, fruit, noodles, rice, nuts and seeds, coffee, and soda.