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Estimated effects of white rice consumption and rice variety selection on incidence of type 2 diabetes in Cambodia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2015

Seila Sar
Affiliation:
The University of Queensland, Centre for Nutrition & Food Sciences, Queensland Alliance for Agricultural & Food Innovations, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Geoffrey C Marks*
Affiliation:
The University of Queensland, School of Public Health, Herston, QLD 4006, Australia
*
* Corresponding author: Email g.marks@sph.uq.edu.au
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Abstract

Objective

Rice consumption patterns are considered an important risk factor for diabetes in many countries. The present study aimed to model the impact of a shift in consumption of white rice from current to appropriately reduced levels and a shift in rice variety from one with a high glycaemic index to one with a low glycaemic index, on the burden of type 2 diabetes in Cambodia.

Design

Prevent Plus software was used to model the impact of selected changes to white rice consumption on the burden of type 2 diabetes. Data used for modelling included: demographic projections, relative risk estimates for white rice consumption and diabetes, diabetes incidence, rice type and quantities consumed. The 10-year projections were based on different scenarios of changes in risk factors.

Results

With no intervention, 10-year projections showed that total new diabetes cases will increase from 11 315 (9·1 per 10 000 person-years) for the year 2011 to 14 852 new cases (12·4 per 10 000 person-years) in 2020. However, this increase will be reduced by 27 % (average across 10 years) with a change in rice variety from Phka Rumdual to IR66 and by 26 % (average across 10 years) with a 25 % reduction in quantity from current consumption levels.

Conclusions

Changing rice consumption patterns has potential for an important impact on diabetes risk, with a change of rice variety having a similar impact on the burden of diabetes in communities consuming rice with a high glycaemic index as a 25 % reduction in the quantity of rice consumed. Similar effects are likely for other countries with rice as a staple food, diversity in rice varieties and high incidence of diabetes.

Information

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2015 
Figure 0

Table 1 Prevalence of diabetes in Cambodia*

Figure 1

Table 2 Daily intake of cooked white rice consumed by Cambodians (g/person)*

Figure 2

Fig. 1 Projected incidence of diabetes in Cambodia by year, 2010–2020, under different intervention scenarios: (a) incidence of diabetes by sex and year corresponding to changing from Phka Rumduol (PR) to IR66 rice variety (, PR (total); , IR66 (total); , PR (women); , IR66 (women); , PR (men); , IR66 (men)); (b) incidence of diabetes by sex and year corresponding to a reduction from the current rice consumption level, 1152 g/d, to the intervention level, 858 g/d (, current level (total); , intervention (total); , current level (women); , intervention (women); , current level (men); , intervention (men)); (c) comparison between the effects of a reduction in rice consumption level and changing rice variety on total incidence of diabetes (, current consumption; , reducing quantity; , changing variety)

Figure 3

Table 3 PIF (%) for diabetes attributable to making selected changes to daily white rice consumption patterns in Cambodia