de Las Heras Gala, T. ; Herder, C.* ; Rutters, F.* ; Carstensen-Kirberg, M.* ; Huth, C. ; Stehouwer, C.D.A.* ; Nijpels, G.* ; Schalkwijk, C.* ; Flyvbjerg, A.* ; Franks, P.W.* ; Dekker, J.* ; Meisinger, C. ; Koenig, W.* ; Roden, M.* ; Rathmann, W.* ; Peters, A. ; Thorand, B.
Association of changes in inflammation with variation in glycaemia, insulin resistance and secretion based on the KORA study.
Diabetes Metab. Res. Rev. 34:e3063 (2018)
Aims Subclinical systemic inflammation may contribute to the development of type 2 diabetes, but its association with early progression of glycaemic deterioration in persons without diabetes has not been fully investigated. Our primary aim was to assess longitudinal associations of changes in pro-inflammatory (leukocytes, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP)) and anti-inflammatory (adiponectin) markers with changes in markers that assessed glycaemia, insulin resistance, and secretion (HbA(1c), HOMA-IR, and HOMA-beta). Furthermore, we aimed to directly compare longitudinal with cross-sectional associations. Materials and methods Results This study includes 819 initially nondiabetic individuals with repeated measurements from the Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg (KORA) S4/F4 cohort study (median follow-up: 7.1 years). Longitudinal and cross-sectional associations were simultaneously examined using linear mixed growth models. Changes in markers of inflammation were used as independent and changes in markers of glycaemia/insulin resistance/insulin secretion as dependent variables. Models were adjusted for age, sex, major lifestyle and metabolic risk factors for diabetes using time-varying variables in the final model. Changes of leukocyte count were positively associated with changes in HbA(1c) and HOMA-beta while changes in adiponectin were inversely associated with changes in HbA(1c). All examined cross-sectional associations were statistically significant; they were generally stronger and mostly directionally consistent to the longitudinal association estimates. Conclusions Adverse changes in low-grade systemic inflammation go along with glycaemic deterioration and increased insulin secretion independently of changes in other risk factors, suggesting that low-grade inflammation may contribute to the development of hyperglycaemia and a compensatory increase in insulin secretion.
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Publikationstyp
Artikel: Journalartikel
Dokumenttyp
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Typ der Hochschulschrift
Herausgeber
Schlagwörter
Glycaemic Deterioration ; Hba(1c) ; Inflammation ; Insulin Resistance ; Beta-cell Function; Beta-cell Function; Subclinical Inflammation; Adiponectin Levels; Cardiovascular-disease; Glucose-tolerance; Diabetes-mellitus; S4/f4 Cohort; Tnf-alpha; High-risk; Sensitivity
Keywords plus
Sprache
Veröffentlichungsjahr
2018
Prepublished im Jahr
HGF-Berichtsjahr
2018
ISSN (print) / ISBN
1520-7552
e-ISSN
1520-7560
ISBN
Bandtitel
Konferenztitel
Konferzenzdatum
Konferenzort
Konferenzband
Quellenangaben
Band: 34,
Heft: 8,
Seiten: ,
Artikelnummer: e3063
Supplement: ,
Reihe
Verlag
Wiley
Verlagsort
111 River St, Hoboken 07030-5774, Nj Usa
Tag d. mündl. Prüfung
0000-00-00
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Prüfer
Topic
Hochschule
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Veröffentlichungsdatum
0000-00-00
Anmeldedatum
0000-00-00
Anmelder/Inhaber
weitere Inhaber
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Priorität
Begutachtungsstatus
Peer reviewed
Institut(e)
Institute of Epidemiology (EPI)
POF Topic(s)
30202 - Environmental Health
90000 - German Center for Diabetes Research
Forschungsfeld(er)
Genetics and Epidemiology
PSP-Element(e)
G-504000-002
G-501900-401
G-504090-001
Förderungen
Copyright
Erfassungsdatum
2018-10-01