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. 2023 Jan 17;20(1):e1004149. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004149

Dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates in association with type 2 diabetes risk: Results from the NutriNet-Santé population-based cohort study

Bernard Srour 1,2,*, Eloi Chazelas 1,2, Nathalie Druesne-Pecollo 1,2, Younes Esseddik 1, Fabien Szabo de Edelenyi 1, Cédric Agaësse 1, Alexandre De Sa 1, Rebecca Lutchia 1, Charlotte Debras 1,2, Laury Sellem 1,2, Inge Huybrechts 2,3, Chantal Julia 1,4, Emmanuelle Kesse-Guyot 1,2, Benjamin Allès 1, Pilar Galan 1,2, Serge Hercberg 1,2,4, Fabrice Pierre 2,5, Mélanie Deschasaux-Tanguy 1,2, Mathilde Touvier 1,2
Editor: Fumiaki Imamura6
PMCID: PMC9844911  PMID: 36649248

Abstract

Background

Nitrites and nitrates occur naturally in water and soil and are commonly ingested from drinking water and dietary sources. They are also used as food additives, mainly in processed meats, to increase shelf life and to avoid bacterial growth. Experimental studies suggested both benefits and harmful effects of nitrites and nitrates exposure on type 2 diabetes (T2D) onset, but epidemiological and clinical data are lacking. We aimed to study these associations in a large population-based prospective cohort study, distinguishing foods and water-originated nitrites/nitrates from those from food additives.

Methods and findings

Overall, 104,168 adults from the French NutriNet-Santé cohort study (2009 to 2021, 79.1% female, mean age [SD] = 42.7 [14.5]) were included. Associations between self-reported exposure to nitrites and nitrates (evaluated using repeated 24-h dietary records, linked to a comprehensive food composition database and accounting for commercial names/brands details of industrial products) and risk of T2D were assessed using cause-specific multivariable Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for known risk factors (sociodemographic, anthropometric, lifestyle, medical history, and nutritional factors). During a median follow-up duration of 7.3 years (interquartile range: [3.2; 10.1] years), 969 incident T2D cases were ascertained. Total nitrites and foods and water-originated nitrites were both positively associated with a higher T2D risk (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.27 (95% CI 1.04 to 1.54), Ptrend = 0.009 and 1.26 (95% CI 1.03 to 1.54), Ptrend = 0.02, respectively). Participants with higher exposure to additives-originated nitrites (i.e., above the sex-specific median) and specifically those having higher exposure to sodium nitrite (e250) had a higher T2D risk compared with those who were not exposed to additives-originated nitrites (HR higher consumers vs. non-consumers = 1.53 (95% CI 1.24 to 1.88), Ptrend < 0.001 and 1.54 (95% CI 1.26 to 1.90), Ptrend < 0.001, respectively). There was no evidence for an association between total, foods and water-originated, or additives-originated nitrates and T2D risk (all Ptrend = 0.7). No causal link can be established from this observational study. Main limitations include possible exposure measurement errors and the lack of validation versus specific nitrites/nitrates biomarkers; potential selection bias linked to the healthier behaviors of the cohort’s participants compared to the general population; potential residual confounding linked to the observational design, as well as a self-reported, yet cross-checked, case ascertainment.

Conclusions

The findings of this large prospective cohort did not support any potential benefits for dietary nitrites and nitrates. They suggested that a higher exposure to both foods and water-originated and additives-originated nitrites was associated with higher T2D risk in the NutriNet-Santé cohort. This study provides a new piece of evidence in the context of current debates about updating regulations to limit the use of nitrites as food additives. The results need to be replicated in other populations.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03335644 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03335644)

Author summary

Why was this study done?

  • - In several countries, debates recently emerged regarding a potential banning of nitrites and nitrates as food additives.

  • - While experimental studies are accumulating and seem to support a prohibiting strategy, epidemiological evidence regarding type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk remains unfortunately limited, yet seems important to develop given the suggested role of N-nitroso compounds in the development of insulin resistance.

  • - Only 1 small prospective cohort study in Iran (n = 2,193) observed direct associations between higher dietary nitrite intakes and a higher T2D risk, in participants with low vitamin C intakes. However, this study did not distinguish between foods and water-originated nitrites and food additives-originated nitrites, and did not collect data on specific consumed brands.

What did the researchers do and find?

  • - We used appropriate statistical models to investigate, in the large prospective cohort NutriNet-Santé (n = 104,168), whether dietary exposure to nitrites/nitrates was associated with T2D risk, while differentiating foods and water-originated nitrites/nitrates from those from food additives.

  • - We found for the first time to our knowledge, an association between additives-originated nitrites and specifically sodium nitrite (e250), with T2D risk (HR higher consumers vs. non-consumers = 1.54 (95% CI 1.26 to 1.90), Ptrend < 0.001).

  • - We also found associations between exposure to total dietary nitrites and a higher T2D risk (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.27 (95% CI 1.04 to 1.54), Ptrend = 0.009).

What do these findings mean?

  • - Our findings suggest a direct association between additives-originated nitrites and T2D risk, and corroborate previously suggested associations between total dietary nitrites and T2D risk.

  • - The main limitations of the study include possible exposure assessment errors, potential selection bias linked to the healthier behaviors of the cohort’s participants compared to the general population, and potential residual confounding linked to the observational design.

  • - Although they need confirmation by other prospective studies and experimental research, these results provide a new piece of evidence in the context of current discussions regarding the reduction of additives-originated nitrites in the food industry and could support the need for better regulation of soil contamination.

Introduction

Nitrites and nitrates are commonly ingested from drinking water and miscellaneous dietary sources, as they are naturally present in water and soil [1]. The use of nitrogen fertilizers during agricultural practices is responsible for groundwater and surface water pollution by nitrates as well as soil health degradation, which is a rising problem for both human health and ecosystems [2]. The main sources of foods-originated nitrites and nitrates are green leafy vegetables and beetroots [3]. Dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates also includes food additives, as they can be used as preservatives to improve shelf life, also providing a pink coloration to ham and several processed meats [1]. Nitrites and nitrates are massively used as food additives; more than 15,000 packaged items on the French market currently contain added nitrites or nitrates [4].

Apart from dietary exposure to nitrates and nitrites, the nitrate anion (NO3-) is generated endogenously, and is involved in several signaling pathways [5]. About 25% of the ingested exogenous nitrate is reduced to nitrite by commensal bacteria residing in the mouth, of which about 20% is converted to nitric oxide (NO) in the stomach, through the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway (i.e., about 5% of ingested nitrate is converted to NO), providing a continuous source of NO for human body, in addition to NO production through the L-arginine oxidative pathway [5,6]. Mounting evidence led the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) to classify ingested nitrate or nitrite under conditions that result in endogenous nitrosation, leading to the formation of N-nitroso compounds (NOCs), among which nitrosamines, as probably carcinogenic to humans (group 2A) [1], and as proven carcinogens in a number of animal species [7,8]. In contrast, their metabolic impact is unclear, since experimental in vitro/in vivo studies described either potentially beneficial or deleterious metabolic effects of dietary nitrates and nitrites. For example, in mice lacking endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) enzymes (considered as the main source of endogenous NO production, through the L-arginine oxidative pathway) at high risk of metabolic syndrome-like phenotype, nitrate supplementation, allowing the endogenous production of NO by the sequential reduction of nitrate to nitrite and then NO, through the alternative nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway, reduced body weight (BW), improved glucose tolerance, and decreased plasma triglycerides and levels of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) [9]. Another study suggested that vegetable-derived nitrate in mice fed a high-fat and high-fructose diet improved insulin sensitivity in the homeostatic model assessment (HOMA) [10]. On the other hand, some experimental studies suggested that the formation of nitrosamines might have adverse effects on insulin/insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling pathways and pancreatic β cell functions [11,12], therefore potentially playing a role in insulin resistance development and its related metabolic disorders.

However, there is a lack of human data regarding the role of dietary nitrites and nitrates in metabolic dysfunction and type 2 diabetes (T2D) onset [5]. Indeed, to our knowledge, only 1 small prospective cohort study in Iran (n = 2,193) explored and found direct associations between higher dietary nitrite intakes, assessed using a 168-item semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire, and a higher T2D risk, in participants who had a low vitamin C intake (<108 mg/d) [13]. In this study, no difference was made between foods and water sources of nitrites/nitrates and food additive sources, even though animal/plant-based sources were used as a proxy for the source, and the specific exposure to nitrite/nitrate additives (potassium nitrite (European code e249), sodium nitrite (e250), sodium nitrate (e251), and potassium nitrate (e252)) was not evaluated.

In a context where several public health authorities around the world are questioning a possible suspension of the use of nitrites and nitrates as food additives [14], we aimed to investigate, in the large prospective cohort NutriNet-Santé, whether dietary exposure to nitrites/nitrates was associated with T2D risk, while differentiating those originated from food and water, from those originated from food additives.

Material and methods

Study population

The NutriNet-Santé study aims to investigate the associations between nutrition and health. It is an ongoing web-based cohort launched in May 2009 in France. Participants aged 15 years or above with access to the internet are continuously recruited since May 2009 among the general population. Details have been reported elsewhere [15]. Enrolled participants completed questionnaires using a dedicated online platform (etude-nutrinet-sante.fr). The NutriNet-Santé study is conducted according to the Declaration of Helsinki guidelines and was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the French Institute for Health and Medical Research (IRB Inserm n°0000388FWA00005831) and the “Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés” (CNIL n°908450/n°909216). It is registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03335644. Electronic informed consent is obtained from each participant. The NutriNet-Santé study was developed to investigate the relationships between multiple dietary exposures and the incidence of chronic diseases, such as T2D. The general protocol of the cohort, written in 2008 before the beginning of the study, is available online [16]. Regarding food additives specifically, the present work is part of a series of prespecified analyses that are included in a project funded by the European Research Council (https://erc.europa.eu/news-events/magazine/erc-2019-consolidator-grants-examples#ADDITIVES).

Data collection

At baseline, participants completed a batch of 5 questionnaires related to sociodemographic and lifestyle characteristics (e.g., sex, date of birth, occupation, educational level, smoking status), anthropometry (e.g., height, weight) [17], physical activity (7-day International Physical Activity Questionnaire [IPAQ]) [18], health status, and dietary intakes. Participants were invited to complete a series of 3 non-consecutive validated web-based 24-h dietary records at baseline and every 6 months, randomly assigned over a 2-week period (2 weekdays and 1 weekend day). In this prospective study, we averaged dietary intakes from all 24-h dietary records available during the first 2 years of each participant’s follow-up, considering them as baseline usual dietary intakes. The NutriNet-Santé web-based self-administered 24-h dietary records have shown good performances when tested against an interview by a trained dietitian [19] and against blood and urinary biomarkers (showing reasonable estimates of true intakes of fruits, vegetables, fish, beta carotene, vitamin C, n-3 fatty acids, proteins, and potassium) [20,21]. The dietary assessments included details of commercial names/brand of industrial products, to properly estimate individual additive exposure. All foods and beverages consumed during a 24-h period for each of the 3 main meals (breakfast, lunch, and dinner) and any other eating occasion were declared using the platform, with an estimation of portion sizes based on validated photographs or quantified weight/volume. Dietary underreporting was identified on the basis of the method proposed by Black [22], using the basal metabolic rate and Goldberg cutoff, and under-energy reporters were excluded (details and comparison between under-reports and included participants in Method A in S1 Appendix). Mean daily alcohol, micro- and macro-nutrient, and energy intakes were calculated using the NutriNet-Santé food composition database, containing more than 3,500 different items [23]. In addition, fasting blood samples were collected for 19,772 participants.

Exposure to nitrites and nitrates

The detailed assessment method of nitrites and nitrates has been described elsewhere [24]. Briefly, we estimated intakes of nitrites/nitrates as (1) foods and water-originated (non-additive sources), i.e., naturally occurring in food products and water contamination; and (2) food additives-originated (detailed in Method B in S1 Appendix), that is exposure to potassium nitrite (e249), sodium nitrite (e250), sodium nitrate (e251), and potassium nitrate (e252). We also determined the exposure to total nitrites/nitrates, reflecting the exposure from both foods, water, and food additives.

Foods-originated nitrites/nitrates were determined by food category using the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)’s concentration levels for natural sources and contamination from agricultural practices [25,26]. The French official regional sanitary control of tap water was used to estimate intakes via water consumption, by region of residence [27]: SISE-Eaux is a French governmental database including data on quality control of tap water in the 34,955 French municipalities. It is coordinated by the Regional Health Agencies and consists of a collection of 310,000 samples per year (12 million samples overall). Data are available publicly [27] and a municipality-specific merge according to the NutriNet-Santé participants’ postal code has been performed, as well as a dynamic temporal merge according to the year of dietary records. As regards all food additives in the NutriNet-Santé cohort, a double qualitative/quantitative approach was used: The presence of food additives was determined using 3 databases: OQALI [28], a national database hosted by the French food safety authority (ANSES) and National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and the Environment (INRAE) to characterize the quality of the food supply, Open Food Facts [4], an open collaborative database of food products marketed worldwide, and Mintel Global New Products Database (GNPD) [29], an online database of innovative food products in the world. Quantitative assessment of food additives was performed, using in that order (1) ad hoc laboratory assays; (2) doses of generic foods as reported by EFSA; and (3) from the Codex General Standard for Food Additives (GSFA) [30] in case the first 2 options were not available. The detailed decision tree is described in Method B in S1 Appendix. Despite the validation of dietary records against blood and urinary markers for energy and key nutrients, specific exposure to nitrates and nitrates has not been validated against blood or urine assays, given the challenge in identifying specific biomarkers reflecting exogenous dietary exposure and not endogenous metabolism. Therefore, no objective information on the validity, sensitivity, or specificity of the exposure assessment was available.

Case ascertainment

Participants were asked to declare major health events though the yearly health questionnaire, through a specific health check-up questionnaire every 6 months, or at any time through a specific interface on the study website. They were also asked to declare all medications they use via the check-up and yearly questionnaires. Besides, data from NutriNet-Santé are linked to medico-administrative databases of the national health insurance (SNIIRAM) database (Decree in the Council of State (n°2013–175)), providing detailed information about the reimbursement of medication and medical consultations. T2D cases were ascertained using a multisource approach, i.e., T2D declaration during follow-up along with declaration of the use of T2D medication (or a reimbursement of T2D medication detected from SNIIRAM) or hyperglycemia in the biological data along with 1 T2D medication use during follow-up. The detailed T2D case ascertainment is presented in Method C in S1 Appendix. All incident T2D cases ascertained up to October 1, 2021 were considered in this study.

Statistical analyses

A total of 104,168 participants reporting no prevalent T2D at baseline and who provided at least 2 valid 24-h dietary records during their first 2 years of follow-up were included. Flowchart is presented in Figure A in S1 Appendix. We defined sex-specific tertiles of intakes of nitrites and nitrates (total and foods and water-originated), based on the whole population. For additives-originated nitrites and nitrates, as the number of non-consumers was substantial (>25%), 3 categories of intakes were defined: non-consumers, low consumers, and high consumers (the latter 2 being separated by sex-specific median among consumers). Potassium nitrite (e249) and sodium nitrate (e251) were consumed by less than 1% of the population. They were therefore considered in the total food additive analyses, but their individual associations with T2D risk were not studied. Cause-specific Cox proportional hazards models with age as the primary timescale were used to study the associations between the exposure to nitrites and nitrates with T2D risk, with death and type 1 diabetes handled as competing events (i.e., an event whose occurrence precludes the occurrence of the primary event of interest). In observational cohort studies, these models do not allow to interpret data in terms of direct causal inference but are designed to account for competing risks [31]. Among cases, participants contributed person time until the date of T2D occurrence. Among non-cases, participants were censored at the date of last completed questionnaire, the date of diagnosis of an incident type 1 diabetes (88 cases, crude incidence rate 12.3 for 100,000 person-years, considered as “non-cases”), the date of death, or October 1, 2021, whichever occurred first. The proportional hazard assumption was verified by using rescaled Schoenfeld-type residuals.

An age (timescale) and sex-adjusted model was first performed. Then, the main model was adjusted for age (as timescale), sex, educational level (primary, secondary, undergraduate, postgraduate), smoking status (current daily, current occasional, former, and never smokers), number of pack-years (continuous), BMI (kg/m2, continuous), physical activity (high, moderate, low, calculated according to IPAQ recommendations [18]), energy intake without alcohol (kcal/d, continuous), alcohol (including restricted cubic splines to account for nonlinearity), natural sugars, added sugars, saturated fatty acids, and fiber intakes (g/d, continuous), vitamin C (mg/d, continuous), beta-carotene (μg/d, continuous), sodium (mg/d, continuous) and heme iron intakes (mg/d, continuous), number of 24-h dietary records (continuous), family history of T2D (yes/no), use of dietary supplements (yes/no), and artificial sweetener intake (mg/d) as potential markers of health consciousness, as well as the proportion in weight of ultra-processed food in the diet (as defined by the NOVA classification) [32] as an overall dietary pattern. All models were mutually adjusted for nitrate/nitrite intakes other than the specific one studied: For example, when evaluating additives-originated nitrites, we adjusted for foods and water-originated nitrites and for total nitrates. Multiple Imputation by Chained Equations method by fully conditional specifications (20 imputed datasets) was performed to handle missing data for the following covariates: physical activity level (13.9%), level of education (6.2%), BMI (0.8%), and smoking status (0.2% of missing data). Dose-response relationships were investigated graphically with restricted cubic splines. Associations between nitrites/nitrates from different food sources (fruits and vegetables, unprocessed and processed meat products) were also investigated, with mutual adjustment.

It has been suggested that antioxidant intake might be an effect-modifier of the associations between nitrites and T2D risk by affecting endogenous conversion of nitrites to nitrosamines [13]. Thus, interactions between nitrite/nitrate intakes and intakes of antioxidant vitamins (A, C, and E, coded as binary categorical variables: below/above the sex-specific median) on the other hand were tested as secondary analyses, by introducing the product of the 2 variables into the Cox models. Interactions with sex were also tested. Several models were also tested as sensitivity analyses: (1) exclusion of the first 2 years of follow-up for all participants to challenge a potential reverse causality bias; (2) adjustment for a healthy dietary pattern; (3) adjustment for sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption (g/d); (4) adjustment for prevalent hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, and hypertriglyceridemia; (5) restricting analyses to participants older than 30 years; and (6) to those having at least three 24-h dietary records. In order to estimate the relative strength of the associations, a mutually adjusted model was built including foods and water-originated nitrites, additives-originated nitrites, foods and water-originated nitrates, and additives-originated nitrates (model 7).

Since a recent study suggested positive associations between mouthwash use and T2D through an antibacterial oral effect that might interact with the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway [33], we tested on a subsample of participants the associations between nitrates and T2D risk after adjustment and stratification for mouthwash use. We also explored using logistic regressions the cross-sectional associations with metabolic syndrome (defined as at least 3 out of 5 conditions [34]: abdominal obesity, elevated blood pressure, hypertriglyceridemia, low HDL-cholesterol, hyperglycaemia).

All methods have been described in line with the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in nutritional Epidemiology guidelines (S1 STROBE Checklist). Multi-adjusted Cox models for several confounders were prespecified. The main analyses added following the review process were as follows: further adjustments (for dietary supplement use, artificial sweeteners intake, vitamin C and beta-carotene intakes, added sugar intake, restricted cubic splines for alcohol consumption, and dietary pattern using ultra-processed food consumption in the main model, prevalent hypertension, cardiovascular diseases and hypertriglyceridemia, and consumption of SSBs in sensitivity analyses), analyses by food sources (fruits and vegetables, red and processed meats), the mutually adjusted model, adjustment and stratification for mouthwash use in sensitivity analyses, and cross-sectional analyses with metabolic syndrome in exploratory analyses. All tests were 2 sided, and we considered P < 0.05 to be statistically significant. SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute) was used for the analyses.

Patient involvement statement

The research question developed in this article corresponds to a strong concern of the participants involved in the NutriNet-Santé cohort and of the public in general. Participants to the study are thanked in the Acknowledgements section. The results of the present study will be disseminated to the NutriNet-Santé participants through the cohort website, public seminars, and a press release.

Results

A total of 104,168 participants (among which 72,474 [79.1%] women) were included in the present study. The mean baseline age of participants was 42.7 (SD 14.5) years (age distribution in Figure B in S1 Appendix). Table 1 shows the main baseline characteristics of participants according to their exposure to total nitrites. Compared with the first tertile (crude comparisons), participants among the highest tertile of total nitrites were more likely to be older, to have a higher BMI on average, to have family history of T2D, a higher educational degree, a higher physical activity level, and were less likely to have never smoked. Furthermore, they had higher intakes of energy, water, saturated fatty acids, sugar, alcohol, sodium, beta-carotene and vitamin C, higher consumption levels of fruit, vegetables and red and processed meats, as well as lower contribution of ultra-processed food in their diet. Foods-originated nitrites contributed to 95.3% of total nitrite intakes, followed by food additives-originated nitrites (4.7%) and water-originated nitrites (<0.01%). Foods-originated nitrates were also the main contributors to total nitrate exposure (93.0%), followed by water-originated nitrates (6.9%) and food additives-originated nitrates (0.1%). The main food groups contributing to foods-originated nitrites and nitrates were vegetables and vegetable-based meals (41% and 60%, respectively) followed by processed meat for nitrites (19%) and seasonings for nitrates (23%) (Fig 1). The main food group vector for additives-originated nitrites/nitrates was processed meat consumed as such (60% and 92%, respectively) followed by miscellaneous preparations containing processed meat (Fig 2). Some food groups contribute to both foods-originated and additives-originated nitrites and nitrates: For example, meat products are sources of both (1) foods-originated nitrates/nitrites (even before adding nitrates/nitrites additives), since animals consume themselves sources of nitrates/nitrites such as contaminated water or plant-based foods; and (2) additives-originated nitrites. Approximately, three-quarters of the study sample (73.9%) were exposed to sodium nitrite as food additive (e250) and a third (31.6%) to potassium nitrate as food additive (e252).

Table 1. Baseline characteristics of the study population, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

Characteristics All participants Categories of exposure to total nitrites*
Tertile 1 (n = 34,558) Tertile 2 (n = 34,834) Tertile 3 (n = 34,776)
Age at baseline, mean (SD) 42.7 (14.5) 40.2 (15.6) 44.0 (14.5) 43.7 (14.2)
Women (%) 82,474 (79.1%) 27,362 (79.2%) 27,570 (79.1%) 27,542 (79.2%)
Mean (SD) BMI (kg/m2) ** 23.7 (4.3) 23.1 (4.1) 23.7 (4.3) 24.2 (4.7)
Family history of T2D, yes (%) § 14,369 (13.8%) 4,434 (12.8%) 4,873 (14.0%) 5,062 (14.6%)
IPAQ physical activity level (%)
 High 29,293 (32.6%) 9,052 (30.6%) 9,767 (32.5%) 10,474 (34.7%)
 Moderate 38,649 (43.0%) 12,918 (43.6%) 12,983 (43.2%) 12,748 (42.2%)
 Low 21,896 (24.4%) 7,642 (25.8%) 7,304 (24.3%) 6,950 (23.0%)
Education level (%) £
 < High school degree 17,035 (16.5%) 5,471 (16.0%) 5,912 (17.1%) 5,652 (16.4%)
 <2 years after high school 16,287 (15.8%) 6,103 (17.8%) 5,254 (15.2%) 4,930 (14.3%)
 ≥2 years after high school 69,952 (67.7%) 22,716 (66.2%) 23,348 (67.6%) 23,888 (69.3%)
Smoking status (%)
 Current daily 10,420 (10.0%) 3,891 (11.3%) 2,916 (8.4%) 3,613 (10.4%)
 Current occasional 4,310 (4.1%) 1,448 (4.2%) 1,215 (3.5%) 1,647 (4.7%)
 Former 42,223 (40.6%) 12,550 (36.3%) 14,374 (41.3%) 15,299 (44.0%)
 Never 47,144 (45.3%) 16,644 (48.2%) 16,308 (46.8%) 14,192 (40.8%)
Dietary supplement use, yes (%) 53,857 (51.7%) 18,013 (52.1%) 17,934 (51.5%) 17,910 (51.5%)
Mean (SD) energy intake without alcohol (kcal/d) 1,846.2 (451.6) 1,703.2 (403.5) 1,859.7 (422.7) 1,974 (483.6)
Mean (SD) water intake (g/d) 2,111.7 (645.0) 1,847.8 (573.3) 2,120.8 (580.9) 2,364.8 (669.0)
Mean (SD) alcohol intake (g/d) 7.8 (11.8) 5.6 (9.8) 6.9 (10.3) 11.0 (14.1)
Mean (SD) natural sugar intake (g/d) 54.1 (21.9) 47.7 (19.3) 55.1 (20.2) 59.4 (24.2)
Mean (SD) added sugar intake (g/d) 38.7 (23.7) 39.6 (24.0) 38.7 (22.9) 37.7 (23.9)
Mean (SD) fiber intake (g/d) 19.5 (7.2) 17.3 (6.7) 19.7 (6.5) 21.4 (7.7)
Mean (SD) saturated fatty acids (g/d) 33.2 (12.1) 30.5 (10.9) 33.5 (11.5) 35.6 (13.1)
Mean (SD) percentage of ultra-processed food weight in the diet 17.3 (9.8) 18.8 (11.0) 16.7 (9.2) 16.4 (8.8)
Mean (SD) sodium intake (mg/d) 2,712.3 (880.9) 2,383.4 (751.6) 2,726.0 (803.8) 3,025.5 (953.9)
Mean (SD) vitamin C intake (mg/d) 115.8 (72.4) 98.9 (73.5) 117.5 (62.7) 131.1 (76.7)
Mean (SD) beta-carotene intake (μg/d) 3,446.0 (2,518.6) 2,819.2 (2,288.2) 3,502.2 (2,303.4) 4,012.4 (2,787.4)
Mean (SD) artificial sweetener intake (mg/d) 15.6 (48.2) 13.9 (44.4) 14.6 (44.2) 18.3 (55.1)
Mean (SD) consumption of fruit (g/d) 189.9 (148.0) 144.7 (117.4) 200.2 (137.4) 224.4 (172.3)
Mean (SD) consumption of vegetables (g/d) 217.2 (116.8) 165.0 (90.5) 220.9 (97.7) 265.6 (134.5)
Mean (SD) consumption of red meat (g/d) 41.7 (38.8) 30.7 (31.7) 43.8 (36.9) 50.5 (44.2)
Mean (SD) consumption of processed meat (g/d) 19.4 (23.8) 15.3 (21.0) 19.2 (21.9) 23.8 (27.2)
Mean (SD) heme iron intake (mg/d) 1.2 (1.2) 0.8 (0.8) 1.2 (1.1) 1.5 (1.4)
Mean (SD) total nitrite intake (mg/d) 5.7 (3.4) 3.3 (0.9) 5.1 (0.7) 8.6 (4.3)
 Mean (SD) foods-originated nitrites (mg/d) 5.3 (3.2) 3.1 (0.8) 4.9 (0.8) 8.0 (4.1)
 Mean (SD) water-originated nitrites (mg/d) 4 × 10−4 (5 × 10−3) 3 × 10−4 (4 × 10−3) 4 × 10−4 (4 × 10−3) 5 × 10−4 (6 × 10−3)
 Mean (SD) additives-originated nitrites (mg/d) 0.31 (1.01) 0.14 (0.21) 0.22 (0.29) 0.56 (1.68)
 Mean (SD) sodium nitrite (e250) intake (mg/d) 0.28 (0.86) 0.14 (0.21) 0.22 (0.29) 0.47 (1.43)
Mean (SD) total nitrate intake (mg/d) 213.2 (110.8) 166.9 (85.9) 217.1 (94.8) 255.3 (128.4)
 Mean (SD) foods-originated nitrates (mg/d) 198.4 (108.7) 153.5 (83.9) 202.2 (93.1) 239.1 (126.6)
 Mean (SD) water-originated nitrates (mg/d) 14.6 (12.3) 13.3 (11.5) 14.7 (12.0) 15.9 (13.1)
 Mean (SD) additives-originated nitrates (mg/d) 0.18 (0.51) 0.12 (0.37) 0.18 (0.48) 0.25 (0.62)
 Mean (SD) potassium nitrate (e252) intake (mg/d) 0.18 (0.41) 0.11 (0.30) 0.17 (0.38) 0.24 (0.51)

Values are n (%) unless stated otherwise.

P-values were obtained using ANOVA models for continuous variables, and Chi-squared tests for categorical ones, and were all significant (<0.001), except for dietary supplement use (p = 0.1).

IPAQ: International Physical Activity Questionnaire; 1 kcal = 4.18 kJ = 0.00418 MJ.

* Categories of exposure were defined as sex-specific tertiles. Tertile cutoffs for total nitrites were: 4.03 mg/d and 5.55 mg/d in women and 5.18 mg/d and 7.44 mg/d in men.

** Available for 102,580 participants.

§ Among first degree relatives.

£ Available for 103,274 participants.

Available for 89,838 participants.

‡ Available for 104,097 participants.

Fig 1. Food sources of foods-originated nitrites and nitrates, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

Fig 1

Fig 2. Food sources of nitrites and nitrates as food additives, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

Fig 2

Participants were followed for a median of 7.3 years (interquartile range: [3.2; 10.1] years), corresponding to 710,122 person-years, during which 969 cases of T2D occurred (mean [SD] age at T2D occurrence = 59.3 [11.2] years). In age and sex-adjusted models (Table A in S1 Appendix), associations with T2D risk were observed with total nitrites (Ptrend < 0.001), foods- and water-originated nitrites (Ptrend < 0.001), as well as additives-originated nitrites (Ptrend < 0.001) and nitrates (Ptrend = 0.02) (specifically e250 and e252).

The fully adjusted associations between intakes of nitrites or nitrates (total, foods and water-originated, additives-originated) with T2D risk are presented in Fig 3. The proportional hazard assumptions were met (Figure C in S1 Appendix). In the fully adjusted model (Fig 3), total nitrites and foods and water-originated nitrites were both positively associated with higher T2D risk (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.27 (95% CI 1.04 to 1.54), Ptrend = 0.009 and 1.26 (95% CI 1.03 to 1.54), Ptrend = 0.02, respectively). Participants with higher exposure to nitrites from food additives (i.e., above the sex-specific median), and specifically those having higher exposure to sodium nitrite (e250) had a higher T2D risk compared with those who were not exposed to food additive nitrites (HRhigher consumers vs. non-consumers = 1.53 (95% CI 1.24 to 1.88), Ptrend < 0.001 and 1.54 (95% CI 1.26 to 1.90), Ptrend < 0.001, respectively). Dose-responses relationships (Fig 4) showed no evidence of nonlinearity with total and foods and water-originated nitrites (p = 0.08 and 0.1, respectively). As regards nitrites from food additives, the curve showed a nonlinear shape with a plateau in the highly exposed participants (p for nonlinearity <0.001). There was no association between total, foods and water-originated, or additives-originated nitrates and T2D risk (all Ptrend = 0.7).

Fig 3. Forest-plots of the associations between dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates with T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

Fig 3

HR: hazard ratio; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval; PY: person-years. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard model were adjusted for: age (time scale), sex, energy intake without alcohol (kcal/d, continuous), alcohol (including restricted cubic splines to account for nonlinearity), sodium, natural sugars, added sugars, saturated fatty acids, and fiber intakes (g/d, continuous), heme iron intakes (mg/d, continuous), vitamin C intakes (mg/d, continuous), beta-carotene intakes (mg/d, continuous), BMI (kg/m2, continuous), physical activity (high, moderate, low, calculated according to IPAQ recommendations), smoking status (never, former, current daily, current occasional smokers), number of pack-years, number of 24-h dietary records (continuous), family history of diabetes (yes/no), educational level (<high school degree, <2 years after high school, ≥2 years after high school), dietary supplement use (yes/no), artificial sweetener intake (mg/d), proportion of UPF in the diet. All models were mutually adjusted for nitrate/nitrite intakes other than the specific one studied. For example, when evaluating additives-originated nitrites, we adjusted for foods and water-originated nitrites and for total nitrates. For exposure to total nitrites and nitrates and foods and water-originated nitrites and nitrates, sex-specific tertiles of exposure were defined. Cut-offs were: 4.03 mg/d and 5.55 mg/d in women and 5.18 mg/d and 7.44 mg/d in men for total nitrites, 150.09 mg/d and 233.89 mg/d in women and 162.11 mg/d and 251.59 mg/d in men for total nitrates, 3.83 mg/d and 5.29 mg/d in women and 4.92 mg/d and 7.07 mg/d in men for foods and water-originated nitrites, 149.91 mg/d and 233.75 mg/d in women and 161.94 mg/d and 251.32 mg/d in men for foods and water-originated nitrates. For additives-originated nitrites and nitrates, 3 categories of exposure were defined: non-exposed, lower exposure, and higher exposure (separated by sex-specific median among exposed participants). Cut-offs were: 0.19 mg/d in women and 0.25 mg/d in men for additives-originated nitrites, 0.36 mg/d in women and 0.46 mg/d in men for additives originated nitrates, 0.19 mg/d in women and 0.25 mg/d in men for sodium nitrite (e250), 0.36 mg/d in women and 0.46 mg/d in men for potassium nitrate (e252). Cause-specific associations with all-cause mortality as a competing risk are presented in Table G in S1 Appendix.

Fig 4. Dose-response relationships between dietary nitrites (total, foods and water-originated, and additives-originated) and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

Fig 4

Analyses from food sources showed statistically signification associations for nitrites from red and processed meats (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.30 (95% CI 1.30 to 1.58), P-trend = 0.01) and nitrates from red and processed meats (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.34 (95% CI 1.10 to 1.63), P-trend = 0.03), but not for nitrites from fruits and vegetables (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.10 (95% CI 0.88 to 1.37), P-trend = 0.4) or nitrates from fruits and vegetables (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 0.92 (95% CI 0.74 to 1.14), P-trend = 0.5) (Table B in S1 Appendix).

Evidence from interactions with antioxidant intakes was inconclusive. In some cases, associations tended to be more pronounced in participants with antioxidants intake above the median; however, interaction terms were not significant (Table C in S1 Appendix).

Despite nonsignificant interactions with sex (p > 0.1), sex-specific models were performed: in women, associations were found between total nitrites (HRtertile 3 vs. 1 = 1.47 (95% CI 1.14 to 1.90), P-trend = 0.002), nitrites from additives (HRhigher consumers vs. non-consumers = 1.36 (95% CI 1.06 to 1.75), P-trend = 0.006) and foods and water-originated nitrites ((HRtertile 3 vs. 1 = 1.50 (95% CI 1.15 to 1.94), P-trend = 0.002). In men, associations were only significant for nitrites from food additives (HRhigher consumers vs. non-consumers = 1.65 (95% CI 1.15 to 2.36), P-trend = 0.009) (Table C in S1 Appendix).

Overall, results remained similar in all sensitivity analyses or were slightly attenuated (Table D in S1 Appendix). In the mutually adjusted model (model 7), associations were detected for foods and water-originated nitrites (HRtertile 3 vs.1 = 1.22 (95% CI 1.00 to 1.49), P-trend = 0.05), and additives-originated nitrites (HRhigher consumers vs. non-consumers = 1.48 (95% CI 1.21 to 1.82, P-trend = <0.001), but not for foods and water-originated or additives-originated nitrates (P-trend >0.5) (Table D in S1 Appendix).

Furthermore, no associations between nitrates and T2D risk were observed independently of mouthwash use (Table E in S1 Appendix).

In the exploratory cross-sectional analysis with metabolic syndrome, statistically significant associations were found for total nitrites (OR tertile 3 vs. 1 = 1.35 (95% CI 1.16 to 1.58), P-trend <0.001), and foods and water-originated nitrites (OR tertile 3 vs. 1 = 1.45 (95% CI 1.24 to 1.71), P-trend <0.001), but not for additives-originated nitrites (OR tertile 3 vs. 1 = 1.06 (95% CI 0.90 to 1.25), P-trend = 0.5), or nitrates (P-trend >0.1) (Table F in S1 Appendix). However, the evidence that can be drawn out of these findings is weak, given the very restricted sample size and the absence of a prospective design.

Discussion

This large-scale prospective cohort study highlighted an association between the exposure to nitrites, and for the first time to our knowledge, those from food additives (mostly sodium nitrite e250), with T2D risk. Total, foods and water-originated, and additives-originated nitrates were not associated with T2D risk in this study.

To our knowledge, only 1 prospective study conducted in Iran [13] explored the associations between dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates and T2D risk, with no distinction made between foods and water origin and food additives origin. This study included 2,139 adults followed for a median of 5.8y. and suggested positive associations between dietary exposure to total and animal-based nitrites and T2D risk, only in participants with low vitamin C intakes, but not in the whole sample. The Iranian study assessed diet using food frequency questionnaires, which are recognized to provide reliable estimates of dietary habits in terms of “generic” food group consumption [35]. Dietary records are also recognized as appropriate tools to capture usual dietary habits, when administered in a repeated manner (as done in the present study: mean number of records/participant = 6, maximum = 18) [36,37]. Besides, records collecting brand-specific information for commercial products provide higher levels of accuracy to evaluate exposure to specific food additives coming from several commercial products with different brands (given the substantial variation of additive content between commercial brands). In our study, interactions with antioxidants intakes were mostly nonsignificant. In some cases, the associations we observed between nitrites with T2D risk appeared to be more pronounced in participants with higher vitamin C, A, and E intakes (these results should be interpreted with caution since interaction tests were not significant). Several hypotheses could explain these results in our population: first, fruit and vegetables are an important source of both nitrites and vitamin C. Therefore, individuals in the top median of vitamin C intakes are also those with higher values of nitrites intake (mean food and water-originated nitrite intake = 5.8 mg/d versus 4.9 mg/d in participants with vitamin C intake below the median), thus, we were more inclined to detect associations between nitrite intake and T2D risk in this subgroup. Second, participants with higher antioxidant intakes were older (43.6 years in the top vitamin C category versus 41.7 in the bottom category) and had higher energy intakes (1,934 Kcal/day in the top vitamin C category versus 1,757 in the bottom category), which has led to a higher number of cases and a stronger statistical power in participants with higher antioxidant intakes. In the same study by Bahadoran and colleagues [13], no association was observed between dietary nitrates and T2D risk, consistently with our results. However, median intakes of nitrites and nitrates in the Iranian study were higher than those in our study (410 mg/d versus 194 mg/d in our study for nitrates and 8.8 mg/d versus 5.0 mg/d in our study for nitrites). Green leafy vegetables are the major source of dietary nitrates. Even though their role in reducing T2D risk has been suggested [38,39], the most recent meta-analyses [4042] have reported low to very low quality of evidence for the association of cruciferous and green leafy vegetables with T2D risk. This is in line with our findings regarding the lack of association between foods-originated nitrates with T2D risk, or fruits and vegetables-originated nitrites and nitrates with T2D risk. In any case, even though the evidence from our study for these specific analyses might be relatively weak given the (1) moderate-to-strong correlations between nitrites and nitrates from fruits and vegetables with their other components (e.g., vitamin C [Pearson correlation coefficients = 0.41 for nitrites and 0.31 for nitrates], beta-carotene [Pearson correlation coefficients = 0.50 for nitrites and 0.58 for nitrates], dietary fibers [Pearson correlation coefficients = 0.63 for nitrites and 0.57 for nitrates]); (2) the possible lack of statistical power; and (3) potential residual confounding or classification biases, vegetables remain important sources of fibers and antioxidants, and are beneficial components of a healthy diet playing an important role in the prevention of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and some cancers. Previously published meta-analyses [40,43] reported high evidence levels for the role of processed meat, an important contributor to intakes of nitrites as food additives, as a risk factor for T2D risk. Although it is not possible to fully disentangle the effects of each processed meat constituent, the fact that our models were adjusted for others components that could play a role in T2D aetiology (e.g., pro-oxidant heme iron, saturated fatty acids, sodium) suggests that nitrites contained in processed meat might causally contribute to processed meat–T2D associations, which is in line with dietary guidelines recommending to reduce red and processed meats consumption.

Mechanistically, our associations support the suggested role of dietary nitrites observed in experimental studies [11,12], through N-nitroso compounds, in the development of insulin resistance via a disruption of insulin and IGF signaling pathways, and a dysfunction of pancreatic β cells. Moreover, an experimental study on rodent models [44] suggested that long-term high intakes of nitrates or acute high intakes of nitrites down-regulate the eNOS activity (the latter playing a major role in vascular and tissue protection), suggesting a negative cross-talk between the NOS pathway with endogenous nitrates and the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway with dietary nitrates, which might have deleterious health outcomes. Furthermore, a recent study suggested positive associations between regular mouthwash use and T2D through an antibacterial oral effect that might stop the reduction of nitrates to nitrites in the oral cavity [33]. Our results showed no association with nitrates, independently of regular mouthwash use. However, data on mouthwash use was available only in a small subgroup of participants; therefore, we might have lacked statistical power to accurately investigate this assumption. In addition, only 15% of the sample reported using mouthwash at least once a week. As regards the analysis with metabolic syndrome showing a significant positive association with total and foods and water-originated but not with additives-originated nitrites, this model followed a cross-sectional design since biological measures were only available once; thus, the temporal sequence between the exposure and the outcome was not respected. These findings might be due to a reverse causation bias, as participants with a metabolic syndrome could have modified their diets by increasing fruit and vegetable consumption and reducing processed meats.

This prospective study includes several strengths: to our knowledge, it is the first to have explored the associations between nitrites/nitrates, separately from foods and water, and food additives, with T2D risk, using a large panel of confounders and a detailed comprehensive dietary assessment. We used repeated 24-h records to collect information on a wide range of foods containing nitrates and nitrites while specifying their origin (foods and water or food additives). We collected specific information about the consumed commercial brands/names, which is crucial given the heterogeneity of food additives between the available brands. We also used data from 3 different databases coupled to thousands of assays, as well as regional and temporal information about water contamination.

However, some limitations should be acknowledged. First, causation could not be established from this single observational study and residual confounding could not be entirely ruled out. Nevertheless, we adjusted for a wide range of sociodemographic, anthropometric, lifestyle, dietary, and health factors in order to limit this potential bias. Second, even though dietary records were validated against blood and urinary biomarkers for energy and key nutrients, exposure to nitrates and nitrates has not been validated against blood or urine assays due to lack of biomarkers that would be specific enough to reflect exogenous dietary exposure and not endogenous metabolism. For example, plasma nitrate would not only be a marker of dietary sources, but would also reflect nitrate derived from various individual (patho-) physiological pathways, as well as the individual capacity to eliminate nitrate [4547]; similarly for urinary nitrites, in addition to urinary tract infections being an important driver of urine nitrites levels [48] and could provide biased estimates of dietary exposure. Therefore, and despite the use of multiple databases and detailed dietary assessment, the validity of the exposure assessment cannot be guaranteed, the sensitivity and specificity are unclear. Although likely non-differential due to the prospective design, these potential measurement errors may have biased the associations towards an unclear direction. Future validations studies could be considered; for example, using a duplicate-meal design for multiple days to estimate habitual nitrate/nitrite intakes or biomarkers from tissues.

Moreover, as in every population-based observational cohort, generalizability of the results to the whole population should be discussed. Compared with the general French population, NutriNet-Santé participants were younger, more often women, with higher educational and socio-professional levels [49]. NutriNet-Santé shows a good representativeness of adults aged below 75 years old, as this population has mostly home access to the internet [50], and underrepresents participants above 75 years old, who have less access to regular home internet connection. Therefore, caution is needed when extrapolating results from this cohort to participants aged above 75 years old. NutriNet-Santé’s participants were less likely to smoke [51] and to be overweight or obese (28.2% of men and 29.4% of women in NutriNet-Santé versus 54% and 44% in French population [51]). These aforementioned factors explain the lower T2D incidence in our cohort (179 cases per 100,000 person-years after age and sex standardization) in comparison with the general French population (289 cases per 100,000 person-years [52]). Participants had also healthier dietary habits [53], as they had higher consumption levels of fruit and vegetables and lower levels of processed meats consumption compared to the general population, which led to higher levels of exposure to total nitrites and nitrates and lower levels of exposure to food additives in NutriNet-Santé, compared with nationally representative surveys: indeed, exposure levels in the French INCA2 nationally representative survey were 0.04 mg/kg of BW for total nitrites [25] and 1.6 mg/kg BW for total nitrates [26], versus 0.09 and 3.34 mg/kg BW in NutriNet-Santé, respectively. Similarly, average intakes of nitrates in our study were higher than those reported in a systematic review by Babateen and colleagues [54]: average intake of total nitrates in healthy European populations = 107.21 mg/d versus 213.2 mg/d in our study. In contrast, median intakes of nitrites and nitrates in an Iranian study were higher than those in our study (410 mg/d versus 194 mg/d in our study for nitrates and 8.8 mg/d versus 5.0 mg/d in our study for nitrites) [13]. As regards food additives specifically, exposure levels were 0.01 to 0.04 mg/kg BW for nitrites from additives and 0.05 to 0.10 mg/kg BW for nitrates from additives in the multi-country EFSA report, versus 0.004 mg/kg BW and 0.003 mg/kg BW in NutriNet-Santé, respectively. This might have led to an underestimation of true associations with nitrites and nitrates from food additives (due to the reduced contrast between compared groups). In contrast, regarding foods and water-originated nitrites and nitrates, the distribution of exposure in our population allowed us to have enough high consumers to properly explore this relatively extreme part of the curve, which exists (to a lesser extent) in the general population. As classically observed in nutritional epidemiology studies, a significant subsample of the cohort (17%) was flagged as energy under-reporters and were excluded from the final sample. In the nationally representative INCA 3 study conducted in 2016 by the French Food Safety Agency [55], 18% of adult participants were identified as under-reporters using the Black method. Under-reporters in our study were older and were more inclined to be male and current smokers, to have a higher BMI and alcohol intake, and a lower educational level and monthly income. Although their exclusion may limit the generalizability of the findings, it was necessary in order to avoid important exposure classification bias.

Furthermore, with the continuous reformulation of industrial products, assessing the exposure from food additives might be complicated. However, we proceeded with a year-specific dynamic matching, accounting for different compositions of a same product/brand based on the year of consumption. In addition, although under-detection of some diagnosed T2D cases is still possible at baseline and during follow-up, it is likely to have been limited thanks to the multisource strategy for case ascertainment (combining self-report of disease, self-report of medication, link to national health insurance database, and fasting blood glucose on a subsample). The fact that exhaustiveness of T2D case detection cannot be guaranteed (especially those that have never been diagnosed or treated) would mainly have led to reduced statistical power and non-differential classification errors and thus likely to an underestimation of the observed associations. In contrast, it is not likely to explain the statistically significant associations observed. Lastly, classification bias could be possible while estimating water-originated exposure to nitrites/nitrates based on regional and temporal information about tap water contamination, since some individuals may have spent time outside their region of residence. However, French national statistics show that the average French person spends less than a month (27.9 days) outside their residence [56]. Moreover, water-originated nitrites and nitrates represent a small minority of foods and water-originated nitrites and nitrates intakes (<0.01% and 6.9%, respectively). This potential bias was therefore not likely to have a significant effect on our estimates.

In this large prospective cohort, a higher exposure to foods and water-originated and additives-originated nitrites was associated with higher T2D risk. Thus, these results did not support any potential benefits for dietary nitrites or nitrates in T2D prevention. These findings need confirmation by other prospective studies and experimental research, given that the study sample overrepresented women, younger participants, and those having healthier lifestyle habits and higher socio-professional levels, and given the possible exposure measurement errors. Yet, these results provide a new piece of evidence in the context of current discussions regarding the need for a reduction of nitrite additives’ use in processed meats by the food industry and could support the need for better regulation of soil contamination by fertilizers, as highlighted by the latest report of the French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety [57]. In the meantime, several public health authorities worldwide already recommend citizens to limit their consumption of foods containing controversial additives, among which sodium nitrite, in the name of the precautionary principle [58].

Supporting information

S1 STROBE Checklist. STROBE Checklist.

(DOCX)

S1 Appendix. Supplementary material.

Method A. Methodology for identification of under-energy reporting and validation studies for the 24-h web-based dietary records. Method B. Procedures for the computation of food additive data. Method C. Incident T2D ascertainment in NutriNet-Santé and biological data assessment. Figure A. Flowchart for sample selection, NutriNet-Santé, 2009–2021. Figure B. Age distribution of study participants, NutriNet-Santé cohort, 2009–2021 (N = 104,168). Table A. Age and sex-adjusted models for associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Figure C. Proportional hazard assumption testing using rescaled Schoenfeld residuals. Table B. Associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures from fruit and vegetables, and red and processed meats, and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Table C. Sex and antioxidant-stratified associations between exposure to nitrites/nitrates and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Table D. Associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and T2D risk-sensitivity analyses, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Table E. Associations between dietary exposure to nitrates with T2D risk, adjusted stratified for mouthwash use, France, 2009–2021 (n = 25,328). Table F. Cross-sectional associations between dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates with metabolic syndrome prevalence, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 16,450). Table G. Cause-specific associations between dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates with mortality risk as a competing risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We thank Thi Hong Van Duong, Régis Gatibelza, Jagatjit Mohinder, Rizvane Mougamadou, and Aladi Timera (computer scientists); Julien Allegre, Nathalie Arnault, Laurent Bourhis, Nicolas Dechamp, Guillaume Javaux (data-manager/statisticians); Paola Yvroud (health event validator); Maria Gomes (Nutrinaute support) for their technical contribution to the NutriNet-Santé study. We warmly thank all the volunteers of the NutriNet-Santé cohort.

Abbreviations

BW

body weight

EFSA

European Food Safety Authority

eNOS

endothelial NO synthase

GNPD

Global New Products Database

GSFA

General Standard for Food Additives

HOMA

homeostatic model assessment

IARC

International Agency for Research on Cancer

IGF

insulin-like growth factor

IPAQ

International Physical Activity Questionnaire

NO

nitric oxide

NOC

N-nitroso compound

SSB

sugar-sweetened beverage

T2D

type 2 diabetes

Data Availability

Data described in the manuscript, code book, and analytic code will be made available upon request pending application and approval. Researchers from public institutions can submit a collaboration request including information on the institution and a brief description of the project to collaboration@etude-nutrinet-sante.fr. All requests will be reviewed by the steering committee of the NutriNet-Santé study. If the collaboration request is accepted, a data access agreement will be necessary and appropriate authorizations from the competent administrative authorities may be needed. In accordance with existing regulations, no personal identification data will be accessible.

Funding Statement

The NutriNet-Santé study was supported by the following public institutions: Ministère de la Santé, Santé publique France, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRAE), Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers (CNAM) and University Sorbonne Paris Nord. EC was supported by a Doctoral Funding from University Sorbonne Paris Nord - Galilée Doctoral School. CD was supported by a grant from the French National Cancer Institute (INCa). This project (MT) has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No 864219), the French National Cancer Institute (INCa_14059), the French Ministry of Health (arrêté 29.11.19), the IdEx Université de Paris (ANR-18-IDEX-0001) and a Bettencourt-Schueller Foundation Research Prize 2021. This project was awarded the NACRe (French network for Nutrition And Cancer Research) Partnership Label. This work only reflects the authors' view and the funders are not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains. Researchers were independent from funders. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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Decision Letter 0

Callam Davidson

30 Jun 2022

Dear Dr Srour,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript entitled "Nitrites and nitrates dietary exposure from natural sources and food additives and type-2 diabetes risk in the NutriNet-Santé cohort" for consideration by PLOS Medicine.

Your manuscript has now been evaluated by the PLOS Medicine editorial staff and I am writing to let you know that we would like to send your submission out for external peer review.

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Kind regards,

Callam Davidson

Associate Editor

PLOS Medicine

Decision Letter 1

Callam Davidson

1 Aug 2022

Dear Dr. Srour,

Thank you very much for submitting your manuscript "Nitrites and nitrates dietary exposure from natural sources and food additives and type-2 diabetes risk in the NutriNet-Santé cohort" (PMEDICINE-D-22-02217R1) for consideration at PLOS Medicine.

Your paper was evaluated by an associate editor and discussed among all the editors here. It was also discussed with an academic editor with relevant expertise, and sent to independent reviewers, including a statistical reviewer. The reviews are appended at the bottom of this email and any accompanying reviewer attachments can be seen via the link below:

[LINK]

In light of these reviews, I am afraid that we will not be able to accept the manuscript for publication in the journal in its current form, but we would like to consider a revised version that addresses the reviewers' and editors' comments. Obviously we cannot make any decision about publication until we have seen the revised manuscript and your response, and we plan to seek re-review by one or more of the reviewers.

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-----------------------------------------------------------

Comments from the Academic Editor:

The authors conducted novel observational analyses. Besides the comments from the other reviewers, the following comments should be accounted for to identify the appropriateness of this manuscript for potential publication.

The major comments are as follows:

The authors should revise the covariate set to adjust for in their regression analyses. Some concerns are present.

1-1. First, an association of alcohol consumption with T2D is known to be non-linear. The authors should fit restricted cubic spline terms.

1-2. Second, the authors should control for sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption. It is unlikely to be a source of nitrates and nitrites, unless some products uniquely contain those as ingredients, so its adjustment should be fine. Similarly or alternatively, the authors should control for added sugars from beverages and added sugars from solid foods (e.g. cakes). Sugars naturally occurring in foods and added sugars may have differential associations with T2D, as implicated in studies on SSB. Moreover, this current study is relevant to food processing or additives, and thus separation between added sugars and natural sugars is critical in covariate adjustment. In general, authors should be equally careful in exposure and covariate treatments.

1-3. Third, when the authors evaluated naturally-occurring nitrites and nitrites from food additives, they should adjust for those mutually. It was great that the authors clarified the application of mutual adjustment between nitrates and nitrites. This care is necessary for the analysis of sources of nitrates and nitrites. The authors should consider a time-to-event regression model to include nitrites from natural sources, nitrites from additives, nitrates from natural sources, and nitrates from additives.

1-4. The authors should control for intakes of vitamin C and carotenoids from foods, at least. Those intakes or biomarkers are known to be associated with incident T2D. They are likely confounders influencing the potential effect of fruits and vegetables that provide nitrates or nitrites.

1-5. The authors should control for supplement use, artificual sweetener intakes, and others which the authors may come up with as possible indicators of health consciousness. In this study, health consciousness remains a source of unmeasured confounders, and the authors must want to minimize the effect as much as possible.

2. The authors should evaluate nitrates and nitrites from different food sources in another way additionally. As expected, those chemicals mainly come from meat/processed meat consumption, regardless of how the authors identified or defined natural sources or food additives. In general, the positive associations of meat/processed meat consumption with incident T2D have been well-recognized. If those food groups were major drivers of the observed associations of nitrites, the inference from this study would not impact general dietary recommendations.

To clarify if that is the case, the authors should evaluate, for example, nitrites from fruits and vegetables and nitrites from unprocessed and processed meat products separately, with mutual adjustment.

Of note, if nitrite intake from fruits and vegetables showed positive associations with T2D incidence, that would be a meaningful finding that scientists should get aware of for further research.

The authors may find that nitrite intakes from fruits and vegetables showed no significant associations or negative associations (after adjustment for vitamin C, carotenoids, nitrites from other sources, and nitrates from different sources). This finding would be important to clarify no evidence for harm from nitrites in fruits and vegetables.

Collinearity is likely between nitrites from fruits and vegetables, vitamin C, and carotenoids. The authors should present results for the indication, if any, and state the weaknesses of the evidence for nitrites/nitrates from fruits and vegetables.

3.

In the presentation of hazard ratios, the authors should replace the numbers of participants (denominator) with person-time values. The authors evaluated hazard ratios which have close relevance to incidence (N events/ person-time) more than risk (N events/ specific time length). Thus, the authors should show person-time values to allow interpretations of incidence measures.

4.

The authors should present the results from cubic spline analyses and food sources of nitrites and nitrates in the main manuscript, not in the supplementary materials. Those are critical information to present.

Minor comments:

Table 1. The authors can take out the column of P-value and mention that all trends were significant in the footnote.

Requests from the editors:

Please revise your title according to PLOS Medicine's style. Your title must be nondeclarative and not a question. It should begin with main concept if possible. "Effect of" should be used only if causality can be inferred, i.e., for an RCT. Please place the study design ("A randomized controlled trial," "A retrospective study," "A modelling study," etc.) in the subtitle (ie, after a colon).

Abstract Methods and Findings:

* Please include the length of follow up (information found at line 260).

* In the last sentence of the Abstract Methods and Findings section, please describe the main limitation(s) of the study's methodology.

Lines 83-86: Please confirm the correct HR is presented in this bullet point as the abstract suggests it ought to be ‘1.60 (95% CI 1.29-54 1.98), P¬trend<0.001’ for e250 specifically.

Citations should be placed within square brackets.

Line 273: Please round p values to 3 decimal places (state p<0.001).

Table 1 and Figure 1: Footnote ‘*’ is missing the corresponding flag in the table/figure.

For the adjusted analyses in Figure 1, please also present the crude (unadjusted) analyses in the Supporting Information and cite them in your results.

Figure 1 legend should refer to Appendix 9 rather than 8.

Discussion: Please ensure any claims of primacy are tempered by the addition of ‘to our knowledge’, or similar.

Pages 17-19: Please remove the ‘Funding’, ‘Contributorship statement and guarantor’, ‘Transparency statement’, and ‘IARC disclaimer’ subsections – this information will be captured via the submission form and presented as metadata in the event of publication. The ‘Patient involvement statement’ can be relocated to the Methods section.

Appendix 6: Please enlarge the labels for your axes and your title font. Please also refer to p<0.001 rather than P=0.0009.

Please ensure that the study is reported according to the STROBE guideline, and include the completed STROBE checklist as Supporting Information. Please add the following statement, or similar, to the Methods: "This study is reported as per the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guideline (S1 Checklist)."

The STROBE guideline can be found here: http://www.equator-network.org/reporting-guidelines/strobe/

When completing the checklist, please use section and paragraph numbers, rather than page numbers.

Did your study have a prospective protocol or analysis plan? Please state this (either way) early in the Methods section.

a) If a prospective analysis plan (from your funding proposal, IRB or other ethics committee submission, study protocol, or other planning document written before analyzing the data) was used in designing the study, please include the relevant prospectively written document with your revised manuscript as a Supporting Information file to be published alongside your study, and cite it in the Methods section. A legend for this file should be included at the end of your manuscript.

b) If no such document exists, please make sure that the Methods section transparently describes when analyses were planned, and when/why any data-driven changes to analyses took place.

c) In either case, changes in the analysis-- including those made in response to peer review comments-- should be identified as such in the Methods section of the paper, with rationale.

To an extent that is reasonably practical, please avoid textual overlap with your prior publication (Chazelas et al., Int J Epidemiol, 2022; https://academic.oup.com/ije/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ije/dyac046/6550543).

Comments from the reviewers:

Reviewer #1: This is an interesting manuscript analyzing the prospective association between dietary nitrites and nitrates from natural sources and food additives and type 2 diabetes in the NutriNet-Sante cohort with a huge sample size. Overall the manuscript is clear and well written, delivering important public health relevant message about the health effect of dietary nitrites and nitrates especially from the food additives. This reviewer has several comments to help improve the manuscript:

1) Exposure assessment. The reviewer appreciates their effort to validate the web-based 24h dietary records. It seems that the specifical validation for the nitrites and nitrates is lacking? Is there any way to validate these measurements, say, against biomarkers? The results were based on "at least 2 valid 24 dietary records during their first t years of follow-up", so it might be rather random.

2) Outcome ascertainment. It seems that this was based on the self-reported data. It is not clear about the "biological data". Do they provide blood sample for the measurement of glucose or HbA1c? Would underreporting at baseline be possible?

3) Confounders. They include different covariates in the models, which is great. But this reviewer believes that there are several more important confounders for the associations. For examples, those did not consume food additives/nitrites are more likely to have healthy lifestyle/dietary quality and lower risk of diabetes. Therefore, adjustment of dietary pattern and dietary quality seems an important step in the main statistical model. In the sensitivity analysis, they additional adjusted for antioxidant intakes as a proxy for fruit and vegie intake. Why not directly adjust fruit and vegie, which is also indicator of lifestyle?

4) Discussion. They should avoid using the word "robust", as they did not have external validation to prove the robustness. They did not adjust for important lifestyle/ diet quality confounders.

Reviewer #2: In the study entitled: Nitrites and nitrates dietary exposure from natural sources and food additives

and type-2 diabetes risk in the NutriNet-Santé cohort, the authors aimed to investigate the associations between the amount of nitrite and nitrate intakes and their specific food sources (i.e., natural versus additive food sources) and new-onset diabetes, using data of 104168 adults from the French NutriNet-Santé cohort study (2009-2021). They finally concluded that regardless of its sources, higher intake of nitrite exhibited an adverse effect on the development of type 2 diabetes (T2D). No interaction was detected between exposure to nitrate/nitrite and antioxidants (Vitamin C, E and A) in relation to developing T2DM. Use of a national database (i.e., NutriNet-Santé food composition database) for estimation of nutrients, esp. nitrate and nitrites, and assessment of details of commercial names/brand of industrial products to estimate individual additive exposure provides a strong support for estimation of nitrate and nitrites in this population. Although the study design seems well and a relatively-large sample size and use of national databases of food composition are the important strengths of the study, some issues (listed below) may decrease generalizability of the study findings and its reliability.

Major comments:

1. A low incidence rate of T2D, i.e., lower than 1% over a median of 7.3 years of follow-up (969 cases from 104168 subjects) needs explanation. In addition, the prevalence of T2D is lower in this population even compared to French population (1.6% vs. 6%) as authors acknowledged in their previous study (BMJ 2019;365:l1451; doi: 10.1136/bmj.l1451). Therefore, it should be justified that this cohort is representative of the population. This needs for generalization of data.

2. Another concern about the study findings is that the main outcome was self-reported, however the authors claimed that self-report of T2D was tried to be confirmed by supportive data such as National health insurance (SNIIRAM) database or measurement of fasting blood glucose in a sub-sample of the participants (the number of participants with FBS was not reported). Nevertheless, SNIIRAM database only confirmed T2D diagnosis of about 80% of the cases surveyed, and among those who had biochemical measurements, only 85.3 % of those with elevated fasting blood glucose had consistently reported a diagnosis of T2DM and/or medication. Reporting bias of the outcome in this study seem resulted in a considerable underestimation of the outcome that seriously may affect validity and reliability of the study findings. This important issue, therefore, should be discussed by providing a number of relevant evidence indicated that whether such limitation can affect the study findings validity. They should also support their findings by providing national data regarding the prevalence and annual incidence if diabetes in their country. I wonder if undiagnosed type diabetes has been considered in this study.

3. Another issue is existing of an imbalanced-proportion of male and female (79.1% female). Furthermore, as the authors reported, compared with the general French population, NutriNet-Santé participants were younger (included of subjects > 15y), with higher educational and socio-professional levels and healthier dietary habits. They also had higher consumption levels of fruit and vegetables and lower levels of processed meats consumption. These may result in a bias in estimation of both exposure and outcome. As indicated by the authors (P12, lines 328-330), the characteristics of the study population might have led to an underestimation of associations with nitrites/nitrates from food additives, and an overestimation of those with nitrites and nitrates from natural sources.

4. A practical approach to response to some of the aforementioned concerns may be excluding younger adults (<30 y) from the analyses, and also conducting sensitivity analyses by separating male and female (use of sex-specific tertiles of exposure that were considered in categorizing nitrate/nitrite levels could not per se eliminate the concern).

5. The authors considered both food products and water as naturally occurring sources of nitrite (or non-additive sources); I have concern about such categorization, because nitrite is considered as a contaminant agent in drinking water that is originated from fertilizers through run-off water, sewage, and mineral deposits. Labeling that nitrite, therefore, as natural source-originated may be misleading. A good suggestion may be separating sources of nitrite as foods-originated, water-originated and additives-originated, however, the estimated nitrite intake from drinking water was negligible (< 0.01% compared to 95.3% of total nitrite intakes from food sources).

6. Although a main strength of the study is using a web-based self-administered 24h-dietary records (repeated at 6-month intervals) with a valid and reliable estimations of dietary intakes (validated by face-to-face dietician interview, and biological biomarkers), under-reporting of energy intakes (about 17%, as reported in the study flowchart) is questionable.

7. The authors claimed that they used the French official regional sanitary control of tap water to estimate intakes of nitrite from drinking water. They need to provide more details regarding individual estimation of water-originated nitrite.

8. In the introduction section, authors stated that "In the mouth, much of the ingested exogenous nitrate is reduced to nitrite by commercial bacteria…."; this sentence need to be corrected as of ingested nitrate, ~25 % is extracted by the salivary glands and of which ~20 % is converted nitrite. It means that about 5 % of ingested nitrate is converted to nitrite in the oral cavity. This nitrite then is converted to NO in the stomach providing a continuous source of NO for human body. (see PMID: 35391922 for more details).

9. In the introduction authors state that eNOS is responsible for endogenous nitrate regulation; although eNOS is considered as the main source of NO production, which is converted to nitrite and then nitrate, the sentence is not factually correct that eNOS regulated nitrate.

10. Authors need to compare nitrate/nitrite intakes in this population with those from other populations (see for example, Babateen AM, Fornelli G, Donini LM, Mathers JC, Siervo M. Assessment of dietary nitrate intake in humans: a systematic review. Am J Clin Nutr. 2018;108:878-88).

11. Page 8, line 213, authors state that date of an incident type-1 diabetes was considered for person time calculation, please provide data on incidence of T1D in the population.

Minor comments

1. In the most Figures presented in the supplementary material, Y-axis is not started from zero. I strongly suggested that in all cases the start oy Y-axis to be zero.

2. Page 10, lines 272-273: "As regards nitrites from food additives, the curve showed a logarithmic shape 273 with a plateau in the highly exposed participants (p for non-linearity =0.0009)". I did not find a figure in supplementation with logarithmic scales. Please add such a figure.

3. I suggest that authors measure urine nitrate and nitrate in sub-sample to provide better indication of exposure to nitrate and nitrite.

Reviewer #3: The authors investigated the possible associations between nitrite/nitrate intakes and their sources with development of type 2 diabetes in the framework of the French NutriNet-Santé cohort study (2009-2021). They reported an estimated population-mean intake of 194 and 5 mg/d for nitrate and nitrite, respectively and concluded that higher intake of nitrite from both natural and food additive sources increased risk of type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, they reported that there was no interaction between nitrate/nitrite intakes and antioxidants in relation to the development of diabetes, unlike those previously reported in a population-based cohort for nitrite and vitamin C.

One of the main strength of the study was use of a national database for estimation of nitrate and nitrites, and assessment of details of commercial names/brand of industrial products to estimate individual additive exposure provides a strong support for estimation of nitrate and nitrites in this population. Some issues, however, should be considered for potential further evaluation:

1. A low incidence rate of diabetes (~0.09%) during the study follow-up, an imbalanced-proportion of male and female in the study (79.1% female), including adolescents in the study participants, and self-reporting of the main outcome which seems resulted in an underestimation of the outcome, may decrease validity and reliability of the study findings.

2. The authors discussed that the study participants had higher educational and socio-professional levels and healthier dietary habits (e.g., higher consumption levels of fruit and vegetables and lower levels of processed meats consumption); these characteristics may seriously affect estimation of nitrites/nitrates intakes from food additives that was reported about 4.7% of total intakes.

3. The other confounders such as hypertension, history of CVD, TG/HDL-C and FPG level did not consider in their data analysis.

4. I do not agree with the authors regarding their definition about naturally occurring sources of nitrite (food products + water); nitrite is a contaminant agent in drinking water and categorizing it as a natural-originated compound is not acceptable. Moreover, I have some concerns about defining sources of nitrate/nitrite at all; as illustrated in Appendix 4a (Natural food (solid) sources of nitrites and nitrates) and Appendix 4b (Food sources of nitrites as food additives), "processed meats" were considered in both categories. Please be clearer about defining sources of nitrite and nitrate.

5. The authors should also examine the association between dietary exposure to nitrites/nitrates with incident prediabetes or metabolic syndrome.

6. The authors need to make a comparison between their estimations about dietary intakes of nitrate/nitrite with other populations (especially European populations) and probably previous estimations from their country.

7. Regardless of using a validated method for estimating dietary intakes, the percent of the study participants that were excluded from the study due to under-report of energy intakes (about 17%), is considerable. Please discuss the issue and provide potential reasons, and address whether this missing information may affect the study generalizability. I strongly suggest that the authors make a comparison between under-reporters and other participant.

Reviewer #4: See attachment.

Reviewer #5: Since the health effect of nitrites and nitrates on incident type-2 diabetes (T2D) is inconclusive and epidemiological and clinical evidence are lacking, this study aimed to examine the association between nitrites/nitrates and T2D through a population based prospective cohort study. The study also distinguished the effects of natural and food additive sources of nitrites and nitrates on T2D. Overall, I think this is a carefully designed and conducted cohort study and the research topic is of importance to population health. However, I am having a little concern on the web-based cohort and the self-administered questionnaire as I think the cohort may not be well representative of the population. Particularly, I think the study population under-represents the old people and people with low or no education. Below please find my specific comments.

1. Competing Interests: please make sure that the funding from the IFIP does not have conflict of interest with this study.

2. Data Availability: noted that data are not fully publicly available.

3. Line 139-140: given that the cohort is web-based and only participants with access to internet are recruited, is there any concern regarding the representativeness of the cohort. Since young people tend to use internet more than the old people, is there skewed age distribution in the recruited cohort?

4. Line 156-158: since the surveys are all self-administered, I am worried whether the cohort will be representative of people with low or no education? Also, is there any concern on the quality of the self-administered survey?

5. Line 195-198: I don't feel comfortable to ascertain people's T2D status through reimbursement of medication. First of all, if people do not want to disclose their disease status, is it ethical to track their medication reimbursement records to expose their disease status? Second, I am hesitant whether this can accurately ascertain people's T2D onset..

6. Line 222-224: when studying sodium nitrite, will adjusting for potassium nitrite (e249), natural nitrite, and overall nitrate intakes blind/obscure the effects of sodium nitrite?

Any attachments provided with reviews can be seen via the following link:

[LINK]

Attachment

Submitted filename: Joshipura_Dietary_Nitrate_Nitrite_Review.docx

Decision Letter 2

Callam Davidson

4 Nov 2022

Dear Dr. Srour,

Thank you very much for re-submitting your manuscript "Dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates in association with type-2 diabetes risk:  Results from the NutriNet-Santé population-based cohort study" (PMEDICINE-D-22-02217R2) for review by PLOS Medicine.

I have discussed the paper with my colleagues and the academic editor and it was also seen again by all reviewers. I am pleased to say that provided the remaining editorial and production issues are dealt with we are planning to accept the paper for publication in the journal.

The remaining issues that need to be addressed are listed at the end of this email. Any accompanying reviewer attachments can be seen via the link below. Please take these into account before resubmitting your manuscript:

[LINK]

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If you have any questions in the meantime, please contact me or the journal staff on plosmedicine@plos.org.  

We look forward to receiving the revised manuscript by Nov 18 2022 11:59PM.   

Sincerely,

Callam Davidson,

Associate Editor 

PLOS Medicine

plosmedicine.org

------------------------------------------------------------

Comments from the Academic Editor:

As the reviewers noted, one of the limitations in this study is no information on the validity of their exposure assessment (nitrates, nitrites).

The authors' approach to this limitation in writing is substandard. They argued as follows. First, it would be ideal to have objective biomarkers for exposures to nitrates and nitrites. Second, there is no promising biomarker for those.

These two arguments partly support why the authors could not assess the validity of their exposure assessment. However, the arguments do not mean we can ignore the specific limitation. The authors should provide an interpretation and conclusion with the weakness into consideration. In other words, the authors should consider the possibility that the finding was an artefact for example.

Any readers would understand that the authors did great for their exposure assessment, including using multiple databases and collecting detailed dietary data. However, the objective view on no information on the validity (sensitivity and specificity) is crucial.

In the revised document, the authors should do the followings:

The authors should revise the abstract and state that they gained no information on the validity and that measurement errors would be substantial to question the positive association. Of note, the error characteristics are unclear, and the authors should not consider the bias-toward-the-null argument as the direction is unclear overall.

The conclusion sentences should be revised to those in the past tense (e.g. is to was) so that the authors can avoid generalizing the study finding to the general fact.

The authors should reduce their discussion on generalisability. The limitations of residual confounding and measurement errors mean that the result itself may be biased within the population. When the observation is biased, generalisability is the secondary concern.

In the method section, the authors should state no objective information on the validity measure.

In the discussion, the authors should clarify that validity, sensitivity, and specificity are unclear in their exposure assessment. The authors can keep the note about little availability of useful objective biomarkers, but should clarify that we must recognize the limitation.

In the discussion section, the authors may propose future validation study with a duplicate-meal design for multiple days sufficient to estimate habitual nitrate/nitrite intakes, for example.

Biomarkers from tissues would be just one of many ways to assess the validity of dietary exposure.

split the long paragraph about strengths and limitations into two.

Minor revisions:

Revise Figure 1 and 2. Avoid showing the pie charts. Change each into a bar chat that has bars which lengths correspond to the average total amounts of the consumption and which internal segments show different sources. Pie charts are generally discouraged to display in a scientific article.

Figure 4. "estimation" should be "Point estimates". "Estimation" is a noun meaning what the authors conducted, not what the authors produced. The underbar "_" should be removed.

The x-axis of the spline figure should have a unit. The abbreviation requires an explanation in the legend.

Requests from Editors:

Line 80: Please update ‘made no difference’ to ‘did not distinguish’

The Data availability and Conflicts of interest sections can be removed from the main text – it is essential that all the relevant material is captured in the Data Availability Statement and Competing Interests sections of the submission form (this information will be published as metadata alongside your article).

Comments from Reviewers:

Reviewer #2: Regarding the revised-version of the manuscript entitled "Dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates in association with type-2 diabetes risk: Results from the NutriNet-Santé population-based cohort study", although some of points have been addressed carefully, some issues need further clarifications.

1- The authors have tried to discuss the important limitation of the current study, i.e., lack of representativeness of the study population, resulted in a lower incidence rate of T2D compared to French population (1% compared to 6%), high-estimated nitrate-nitrite exposure from food sources, and low-estimated nitrate-nitrite exposure from additive sources. They ascertained that their findings could not be generalized to other populations, even French population as well, but their conclusion addresses to updating regulations regarding nitrites from food additives and lack of beneficial effect of dietary nitrate from natural sources. I think that the conclusion should be limited to their study population (young women, with healthy lifestyle, higher socio-professional and educational levels that have mostly home access to the Internet).

2- Regarding T2D diagnosis, the authors reported that "Among the participants who provided blood sample during the clinical/biological examination, 232 had elevated fasting blood glucose (i.e. >1.26 g/L). Among them, 85.3% had consistently declared a T2D diagnosis and/or medication. Elevated blood glucose alone (i.e., without any declaration of T2D diagnosis or treatment) was not considered specific enough to classify the participant as a T2D case". It is not clear why they excluded about 15% of subjects with elevated blood glucose while according to IDF recommendation, fasting glucose higher than 126 mg/dL is a criteria for diagnosis of T2D.

3- The results provided in response to reviewer 3 (comment 5) regarding possible association between nitrate-nitrite and risk of metabolic syndrome (i.e., significant association between total and food-originated nitrite with metabolic syndrome and lack of association with additive-originated nitrite) are in contrast with findings that provided for nitrite and T2D; how the authors explain this?

4- As pointed with reviewer 3 and 4, the estimation of dietary nitrate/nitrite needs to be validated using biological measurements. Although the authors have tried to discuss this important limitation, this issue remains challenging.

5- In response to the comment 11, regarding the incident rate of T1D, the authors provided a rate of 12.3 per 100000 person-year, but they discussed that "Since the outcome of interest was T2D for this study, these incident T1D cases were censored at the date of diagnosis". This sentence is not make sense; please clarify.

6- The response to minor comment 1 "In the most Figures presented in the supplementary material, Y-axis is not started from zero. I strongly suggested that in all cases the start of Y-axis to be zero" is not acceptable. Authors can use two-segment Y-axis to overcome this challenge. It can be found for example in the GraphPad Prism software.

7- Please changes the following sentence:

Original: In the mouth, about 5% of the ingested exogenous nitrate is reduced to nitrite by commensal bacteria residing in that area, and is then converted to nitric-oxide (NO) in the stomach, through the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway, providing a continuous source of NO for human body, in addition to NO production through the L-arginine oxidative pathway.

Suggestion: About 25% of the ingested exogenous nitrate is reduced to nitrite by commensal bacteria residing in the mouth, of which about 20% is converted to nitric-oxide (NO) in the stomach, through the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway (i.e., about 5% of ingested nitrate is converted to NO), providing a continuous source of NO for human body, in addition to NO production through the L-arginine oxidative pathway.

Reviewer #3: I have read the revised version of the manuscript entitled "Dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates in association with type-2 diabetes risk: Results from the NutriNet-Santé population-based cohort study". The manuscript has been revised carefully according to the reviewers' comments, however, I have some points provided below:

1- In response to comment 1 & 2, the lack of representativeness of the study population have been discussed in the revised version, however, the conclusion remained unchanged. The authors could not extrapolate their results to other populations.

2- In response to comment 5, new analyses were performed to assess the possible associations between nitrate/nitrite and risk of metabolic syndrome, and the results indicated a significant association between total and food-originated nitrite with metabolic syndrome and lack of association with additive-originated nitrite. These findings differed from those reported for T2D; would you please explain the new findings?

Reviewer #4: Minor comment: Please correct 'Green leafy vegetables are the major source of dietary nitrates. Even though their role in reducing T2D risk has been suggested [1,2], the most recent meta-analyses [3-5] have reported low to very low quality of evidence for the association of incidence of cruciferous and green leafy vegetables with T2D risk' to 'Green leafy vegetables are the major source of dietary nitrates. Even though their role in reducing T2D risk has been suggested [1,2], the most recent meta-analyses [3-5] have reported low to very low quality of evidence for the association of cruciferous and green leafy vegetables with T2D risk'.

Reviewer #5: Thanks for the detailed responses to my comments/concerns. I think the authors have adequately addressed my and other reviewers' comments. I am happy with the revised version and would greenlight the paper for publication. Congratulations!

Any attachments provided with reviews can be seen via the following link:

[LINK]

Decision Letter 3

Callam Davidson

24 Nov 2022

Dear Dr Srour, 

On behalf of my colleagues and the Academic Editor, Dr Fumiaki Imamura, I am pleased to inform you that we have agreed to publish your manuscript "Dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates in association with type-2 diabetes risk:  Results from the NutriNet-Santé population-based cohort study" (PMEDICINE-D-22-02217R3) in PLOS Medicine.

Before your manuscript can be formally accepted you will need to complete some formatting changes, which you will receive in a follow up email. Please be aware that it may take several days for you to receive this email; during this time no action is required by you. Once you have received these formatting requests, please note that your manuscript will not be scheduled for publication until you have made the required changes.

Please also make the following changes:

* Figure 2 legend should include 'and nitrates'

* Author Summary - Please add an additional single sentence bullet under 'What do these findings mean?' which summarises the study's main limitations.

In the meantime, please log into Editorial Manager at http://www.editorialmanager.com/pmedicine/, click the "Update My Information" link at the top of the page, and update your user information to ensure an efficient production process. 

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To enhance the reproducibility of your results, we recommend that you deposit your laboratory protocols in protocols.io, where a protocol can be assigned its own identifier (DOI) such that it can be cited independently in the future. Additionally, PLOS ONE offers an option to publish peer-reviewed clinical study protocols. Read more information on sharing protocols at https://plos.org/protocols?utm_medium=editorial-email&utm_source=authorletters&utm_campaign=protocols

Thank you again for submitting to PLOS Medicine. We look forward to publishing your paper. 

Sincerely, 

Callam Davidson 

Associate Editor 

PLOS Medicine

Associated Data

    This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

    Supplementary Materials

    S1 STROBE Checklist. STROBE Checklist.

    (DOCX)

    S1 Appendix. Supplementary material.

    Method A. Methodology for identification of under-energy reporting and validation studies for the 24-h web-based dietary records. Method B. Procedures for the computation of food additive data. Method C. Incident T2D ascertainment in NutriNet-Santé and biological data assessment. Figure A. Flowchart for sample selection, NutriNet-Santé, 2009–2021. Figure B. Age distribution of study participants, NutriNet-Santé cohort, 2009–2021 (N = 104,168). Table A. Age and sex-adjusted models for associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Figure C. Proportional hazard assumption testing using rescaled Schoenfeld residuals. Table B. Associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures from fruit and vegetables, and red and processed meats, and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Table C. Sex and antioxidant-stratified associations between exposure to nitrites/nitrates and T2D risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Table D. Associations between nitrite and nitrate exposures and T2D risk-sensitivity analyses, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168). Table E. Associations between dietary exposure to nitrates with T2D risk, adjusted stratified for mouthwash use, France, 2009–2021 (n = 25,328). Table F. Cross-sectional associations between dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates with metabolic syndrome prevalence, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 16,450). Table G. Cause-specific associations between dietary exposure to nitrites and nitrates with mortality risk as a competing risk, NutriNet-Santé cohort, France, 2009–2021 (n = 104,168).

    (DOCX)

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: Joshipura_Dietary_Nitrate_Nitrite_Review.docx

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: response_V1609.docx

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: response_r3_final.docx

    Data Availability Statement

    Data described in the manuscript, code book, and analytic code will be made available upon request pending application and approval. Researchers from public institutions can submit a collaboration request including information on the institution and a brief description of the project to collaboration@etude-nutrinet-sante.fr. All requests will be reviewed by the steering committee of the NutriNet-Santé study. If the collaboration request is accepted, a data access agreement will be necessary and appropriate authorizations from the competent administrative authorities may be needed. In accordance with existing regulations, no personal identification data will be accessible.


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