Waist circumference thresholds predicting incident dysglycaemia and type 2 diabetes in Black African men and women
Waist circumference thresholds predicting incident dysglycaemia and type 2 diabetes in Black African men and women
Aims
To determine the waist circumference (WC) thresholds for the prediction of incident dysglycaemia and type 2 diabetes (T2D) in Black South African (SA) men and women and to compare these to the advocated International Diabetes Federation (IDF) Europid thresholds.
Materials and Methods
In this prospective study, Black SA men (n = 502) and women (n = 527) from the Middle-aged Sowetan Cohort study who had normal or impaired fasting glucose at baseline (2011-2015) were followed up until 2017 to 2018. Baseline measurements included anthropometry, blood pressure and fasting glucose, HDL cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations. At follow-up, glucose tolerance was assessed using an oral glucose tolerance test. The Youden index was used to determine the optimal threshold of WC to predict incident dysglycaemia and T2D.
Results
In men, the optimal WC threshold was 96.8 cm for both dysglycaemia and T2D (sensitivity: 56% and 70%; specificity: 74% and 70%, respectively), and had higher specificity (P < 0.001) than the IDF threshold of 94 cm. In women, the optimal WC threshold for incident dysglycaemia was 91.8 cm (sensitivity 86%, specificity 37%) and for T2D it was 95.8 cm (sensitivity 85%, specificity 45%), which had lower sensitivity, but higher specificity to predict incident dysglycaemia and T2D than the IDF threshold of 80 cm (sensitivity: 97% and 100%; specificity: 12% and 11%, respectively)).
Conclusions
We show for the first time using prospective cohort data from Africa that the IDF Europid WC thresholds are not appropriate for an African population, and show that African-specific WC thresholds perform better than the IDF Europid thresholds to predict incident dysglycaemia and T2D.
metabolic syndrome, obesity, risk stratification, sub-Saharan Africa
918-927
Goedecke, J.H.
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Nguyen, K.A.
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Kufe, C.
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Masemola, M.
ac19dd6b-c441-4ed9-9093-2f7816deb97a
Chikowore, T.
b53b1cb9-8363-4e2c-9d62-dc3a8627a7b5
Mendham, A.E.
b74f6cc8-c7e1-47d9-9361-18ee63667e60
Norris, S.A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Crowther, N.J.
ca4aa5ba-4f92-4c4d-9736-1dcf303dee40
Karpe, F.
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Olsson, T.
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Kengne, A.P.
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Micklesfield, L.K.
e73dd95b-ce79-4dc4-b0be-a8935eb069c8
5 April 2022
Goedecke, J.H.
27db2aa1-04c2-44e8-9c0e-e9bbe98f2e25
Nguyen, K.A.
ad4b6bf5-d180-4f7e-affb-ddf9e1dd8056
Kufe, C.
3b839b26-ac35-463f-9e39-ef5c4b083f05
Masemola, M.
ac19dd6b-c441-4ed9-9093-2f7816deb97a
Chikowore, T.
b53b1cb9-8363-4e2c-9d62-dc3a8627a7b5
Mendham, A.E.
b74f6cc8-c7e1-47d9-9361-18ee63667e60
Norris, S.A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Crowther, N.J.
ca4aa5ba-4f92-4c4d-9736-1dcf303dee40
Karpe, F.
1a83c161-7139-4f80-882b-795008cf531d
Olsson, T.
b471ee17-d479-4f76-bd3e-ee88a308de10
Kengne, A.P.
dd2449c6-d92b-4500-b872-e875f4ca54d2
Micklesfield, L.K.
e73dd95b-ce79-4dc4-b0be-a8935eb069c8
Goedecke, J.H., Nguyen, K.A., Kufe, C., Masemola, M., Chikowore, T., Mendham, A.E., Norris, S.A., Crowther, N.J., Karpe, F., Olsson, T., Kengne, A.P. and Micklesfield, L.K.
(2022)
Waist circumference thresholds predicting incident dysglycaemia and type 2 diabetes in Black African men and women.
Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, 24 (5), .
(doi:10.1111/dom.14655).
Abstract
Aims
To determine the waist circumference (WC) thresholds for the prediction of incident dysglycaemia and type 2 diabetes (T2D) in Black South African (SA) men and women and to compare these to the advocated International Diabetes Federation (IDF) Europid thresholds.
Materials and Methods
In this prospective study, Black SA men (n = 502) and women (n = 527) from the Middle-aged Sowetan Cohort study who had normal or impaired fasting glucose at baseline (2011-2015) were followed up until 2017 to 2018. Baseline measurements included anthropometry, blood pressure and fasting glucose, HDL cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations. At follow-up, glucose tolerance was assessed using an oral glucose tolerance test. The Youden index was used to determine the optimal threshold of WC to predict incident dysglycaemia and T2D.
Results
In men, the optimal WC threshold was 96.8 cm for both dysglycaemia and T2D (sensitivity: 56% and 70%; specificity: 74% and 70%, respectively), and had higher specificity (P < 0.001) than the IDF threshold of 94 cm. In women, the optimal WC threshold for incident dysglycaemia was 91.8 cm (sensitivity 86%, specificity 37%) and for T2D it was 95.8 cm (sensitivity 85%, specificity 45%), which had lower sensitivity, but higher specificity to predict incident dysglycaemia and T2D than the IDF threshold of 80 cm (sensitivity: 97% and 100%; specificity: 12% and 11%, respectively)).
Conclusions
We show for the first time using prospective cohort data from Africa that the IDF Europid WC thresholds are not appropriate for an African population, and show that African-specific WC thresholds perform better than the IDF Europid thresholds to predict incident dysglycaemia and T2D.
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More information
Submitted date: 8 November 2021
Accepted/In Press date: 24 January 2022
Published date: 5 April 2022
Keywords:
metabolic syndrome, obesity, risk stratification, sub-Saharan Africa
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 504751
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504751
ISSN: 1462-8902
PURE UUID: 1d3e72b3-0a32-4d93-b7bf-64aa93c7172c
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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 16:58
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 02:02
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Contributors
Author:
J.H. Goedecke
Author:
K.A. Nguyen
Author:
C. Kufe
Author:
M. Masemola
Author:
T. Chikowore
Author:
A.E. Mendham
Author:
N.J. Crowther
Author:
F. Karpe
Author:
T. Olsson
Author:
A.P. Kengne
Author:
L.K. Micklesfield
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