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Combined influence of insulin resistance, overweight/obesity and fatty liver as risk factors for type 2 diabetes

Combined influence of insulin resistance, overweight/obesity and fatty liver as risk factors for type 2 diabetes
Combined influence of insulin resistance, overweight/obesity and fatty liver as risk factors for type 2 diabetes
OBJECTIVE There is dissociation between insulin resistance, overweight/obesity, and fatty liver as risk factors for type 2 diabetes, suggesting that different mechanisms are involved. Our aim was to 1) quantify risk of incident diabetes at follow-up with different combinations of these risk factors at baseline and 2) determine whether each is an independent risk factor for diabetes.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We examined 12,853 subjects without diabetes from a South Korean occupational cohort, and insulin resistance (IR) (homeostasis model assessment-IR ?75th centile, ?2.0), fatty liver (defined by standard ultrasound criteria), and overweight/obesity (BMI ?25 kg/m2) identified at baseline. Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for incident diabetes at 5-year follow-up were estimated using logistic regression.

RESULTS We identified 223 incident cases of diabetes from which 26 subjects had none of the three risk factors, 37 had one, 56 had two, and 104 had three. In the fully adjusted model, the OR and CI for diabetes were 3.92 (2.86–5.37) for IR, 1.62 (1.17–2.24) for overweight/obesity, and 2.42 (1.74–3.36) for fatty liver. The OR for the presence of all three factors in a fully adjusted model was 14.13 [8.99–22.21].

CONCLUSIONS The clustering of IR, overweight/obesity, and fatty liver is common and markedly increases the odds of developing type 2 diabetes, but these factors also have effects independently of each other and of confounding factors. The data suggest that treatment for each factor is needed to decrease risk of type 2 diabetes.
1935-5548
717-722
Sung, Ki-Chul
a4318faa-ffbe-4206-b7aa-285768065c01
Jeong, Woo-Shin
46ca4da2-ab88-4f75-be90-7a328fb0a6dc
Wild, Sarah H.
b790195a-4aae-421b-81f7-2c18c96e6870
Byrne, Christopher D.
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c
Sung, Ki-Chul
a4318faa-ffbe-4206-b7aa-285768065c01
Jeong, Woo-Shin
46ca4da2-ab88-4f75-be90-7a328fb0a6dc
Wild, Sarah H.
b790195a-4aae-421b-81f7-2c18c96e6870
Byrne, Christopher D.
1370b997-cead-4229-83a7-53301ed2a43c

Sung, Ki-Chul, Jeong, Woo-Shin, Wild, Sarah H. and Byrne, Christopher D. (2012) Combined influence of insulin resistance, overweight/obesity and fatty liver as risk factors for type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care, 35 (4), 717-722. (doi:10.2337/dc11-1853). (PMID:22338098)

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE There is dissociation between insulin resistance, overweight/obesity, and fatty liver as risk factors for type 2 diabetes, suggesting that different mechanisms are involved. Our aim was to 1) quantify risk of incident diabetes at follow-up with different combinations of these risk factors at baseline and 2) determine whether each is an independent risk factor for diabetes.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We examined 12,853 subjects without diabetes from a South Korean occupational cohort, and insulin resistance (IR) (homeostasis model assessment-IR ?75th centile, ?2.0), fatty liver (defined by standard ultrasound criteria), and overweight/obesity (BMI ?25 kg/m2) identified at baseline. Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for incident diabetes at 5-year follow-up were estimated using logistic regression.

RESULTS We identified 223 incident cases of diabetes from which 26 subjects had none of the three risk factors, 37 had one, 56 had two, and 104 had three. In the fully adjusted model, the OR and CI for diabetes were 3.92 (2.86–5.37) for IR, 1.62 (1.17–2.24) for overweight/obesity, and 2.42 (1.74–3.36) for fatty liver. The OR for the presence of all three factors in a fully adjusted model was 14.13 [8.99–22.21].

CONCLUSIONS The clustering of IR, overweight/obesity, and fatty liver is common and markedly increases the odds of developing type 2 diabetes, but these factors also have effects independently of each other and of confounding factors. The data suggest that treatment for each factor is needed to decrease risk of type 2 diabetes.

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Published date: April 2012
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 204759
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/204759
ISSN: 1935-5548
PURE UUID: 74f97297-1b1a-4b16-bf43-e18a33fcccaa
ORCID for Christopher D. Byrne: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6322-7753

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Date deposited: 01 Dec 2011 14:28
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:02

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Author: Ki-Chul Sung
Author: Woo-Shin Jeong
Author: Sarah H. Wild

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