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Adiponectin Trajectories Before Type 2 Diabetes Diagnosis: Whitehall II study

  • Autores: Adam G. Tabak, Maren Carstensen, Daniel R Witte, Eric J. Brunner, Martin Shipley, Markus Jokela, Michael Roden, Mika Kivimaki, Christian Herder
  • Localización: Diabetes care, ISSN-e 0149-5992, Vol. 35, Nº. 12, 2012, págs. 2540-2547
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The role of adiponectin in the natural history of diabetes is not well characterized. We set out to characterize prediagnosis trajectories of adiponectin in individuals who develop type 2 diabetes. In a case-cohort study (335 incident diabetes case and 2,474 noncase subjects) nested in the Whitehall II study, serum adiponectin was measured up to three times per participant (1991-1993, 1997-1999, and 2003-2004). Multilevel models adjusted for age and ethnicity were fitted to assess 13-year trajectories of log-transformed adiponectin preceding diabetes diagnosis or a randomly selected time point during follow-up (year^sub 0^) based on 755/5,095 (case/noncase) person-examinations. Adiponectin levels were lower in diabetes case than in noncase subjects (median 7,141 [interquartile range 5,187-10,304] vs. 8,818 [6,535-12,369] ng/mL at baseline, P < 0.0001). Control subjects showed a modest decline in adiponectin throughout follow-up (0.3% per year, P < 0.0001) at higher levels in women than in men (difference at year^sub 0^: 5,358 ng/mL, P < 0.0001). Female case and early-onset case (age at diagnosis <52 years) subjects had a steeper decline than control subjects (slope difference -1.1% per year, P = 0.001 in females, -1.6% per year in early-onset case subjects, P = 0.034). In men, adiponectin slopes for case and noncase subjects were parallel. The slope differences by diabetes onset were largely attenuated after adjustment for changes in obesity, whereas the sex-specific slope differences were independent of obesity. Lower adiponectin levels were observed already a decade before the diagnosis of diabetes. The marked sex difference in trajectories suggests that sex-specific mechanisms affect the association between adiponectin levels and diabetes development. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]


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