AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied a group of women with a history of gestational diabetes to identify a new metabolite pattern that predicts their risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D).
  • They analyzed blood samples from 175 women who progressed to T2D and 175 controls, creating a metabolomics score based on 21 relevant metabolites.
  • Results showed that women in the top metabolomics score quartile had a over 20 times greater risk of developing T2D compared to those in the lowest quartile, indicating a strong link between these metabolites and T2D risk.

Article Abstract

Background: Several metabolites are individually related to incident type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk. We prospectively evaluated a novel T2D-metabolite pattern with a risk of progression to T2D among high-risk women with a history of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM).

Methods: The longitudinal Nurses' Health Study II cohort enroled 116,429 women in 1989 and collected blood samples from 1996 to 1999. We profiled plasma metabolites in 175 incident T2D cases and 175 age-matched controls, all with a history of GDM before the blood draw. We derived a metabolomics score from 21 metabolites previously associated with incident T2D in the published literature by scoring according to the participants' quintile (1-5 points) of each metabolite. We modelled the T2D metabolomics score categorically in quartiles and continuously per 1 standard deviation (SD) with the risk of incident T2D using conditional logistic regression models adjusting for body mass index at the blood draw, and other established T2D risk factors.

Results: The percentage of women progressing to T2D ranged from 10% in the bottom T2D metabolomics score quartile to 78% in the highest score quartile. Adjusting for established T2D risk factors, women in the highest quartile had more than a 20-fold greater diabetes risk than women in the lowest quartile (odds ratios [OR] = 23.1 [95% CI = 8.6, 62.1]; p for trend<0.001). The continuous T2D metabolomics score was strongly and positively associated with incident T2D (adjusted OR = 2.7 per SD [95% CI = 1.9, 3.7], p < 0.0001).

Conclusions: A pattern of plasma metabolites among high-risk women is associated with a markedly elevated risk of progression to T2D later in life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10842268PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dmrr.3763DOI Listing

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