Journal of Atherosclerosis and Thrombosis
Online ISSN : 1880-3873
Print ISSN : 1340-3478
ISSN-L : 1340-3478

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Dairy Intake and All-Cause, Cancer, and Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Risk in A Large Japanese Population: A 12-Year Follow-Up of the J-MICC Study
Naoko MiyagawaNaoyuki TakashimaAkiko HaradaAya KadotaKeiko KondoKatsuyuki MiuraNahomi ImaedaChiho GotoJun OtonariHiroaki IkezakiKeitaro TanakaChisato ShimanoeMako NagayoshiTakashi TamuraYoko KuboYasufumi KatoYuriko N. KoyanagiHidemi ItoNobuaki MichihataYohko NakamuraShiroh TanoueRie IbusukiSadao SuzukiTakeshi NishiyamaEtsuko OzakiIsao WatanabeKiyonori KurikiTakeshi WatanabeMasashi IshizuAsahi HishidaYoshikuni KitaKenji WakaiKeitaro MatsuoJ-MICC Study Group
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS Advance online publication

Article ID: 65049

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Abstract

Aim: We examined the association between dairy intake and all-cause, cancer, and cardiovascular disease mortality in a cohort of the general population followed up for 12 years across Japan.

Methods: We conducted a longitudinal cohort study of 79,715 participants from the Japan Multi-Institutional Collaborative Cohort study (57.2% women, mean age 54.7 years old). The amount of dairy (milk and yogurt) intake was determined using a validated short-food frequency questionnaire. The hazard ratio for mortality according to sex-specific tertile of dairy intake was calculated using Cox proportional hazards regression models with adjustment for potential confounding factors and dietary factors by sex.

Results: During the follow-up period (932,738 person-years), 3,723 participants died, including 2,088 cancer and 530 cardiovascular disease deaths. The highest tertile of total dairy intake (versus the lowest tertile) was associated with a 19% lower all-cause mortality risk (hazard ratio=0.81, 95% confidence interval: 0.70-0.92; P for trend=0.001) in women. Similarly, we observed inverse associations between milk intake and all-cause and cancer mortality risk in women, yogurt intake and cardiovascular disease risk in women, and yogurt intake and all-cause mortality risk in both sexes.

Conclusion: A higher total dairy and milk intakes in women and yogurt intake in both sexes were associated with a reduced risk of all-cause mortality in the general population across Japan during the 12-year follow-up period.

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