A Single Factor Underlies the Metabolic Syndrome

Author:

Pladevall Manel123,Singal Bonita4,Williams L. Keoki1,Brotons Carlos5,Guyer Heidi26,Sadurni Josep2,Falces Carles2,Serrano-Rios Manuel7,Gabriel Rafael8,Shaw Jonathan E.9,Zimmet Paul Z.9,Haffner Steven10

Affiliation:

1. Henry Ford Health System, Center for Health Services Research, Detroit, Michigan

2. Hospital General de Vic, Cardiology Department, Vic, Barcelona, Spain

3. Programa de Doctorat, Departament de Medicina Interna, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterrra, Barcelona, Spain

4. University of Michigan, Department of Emergency Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan

5. Equip d’Atenció Primària Sardenya, Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

6. University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan

7. Hospital Clínico San Carlos, Internal Medicine Department, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

8. Hospital Universitario La Paz, Clinical Epidemiology Department, Madrid, Madrid, Spain

9. International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield, Victoria, Australia

10. University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, Texas

Abstract

OBJECTIVE—Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to test the hypothesis that the components of the metabolic syndrome are manifestations of a single common factor. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Three different datasets were used to test and validate the model. The Spanish and Mauritian studies included 207 men and 203 women and 1,411 men and 1,650 women, respectively. A third analytical dataset including 847 men was obtained from a previously published CFA of a U.S. population. The one-factor model included the metabolic syndrome core components (central obesity, insulin resistance, blood pressure, and lipid measurements). We also tested an expanded one-factor model that included uric acid and leptin levels. Finally, we used CFA to compare the goodness of fit of one-factor models with the fit of two previously published four-factor models. RESULTS—The simplest one-factor model showed the best goodness-of-fit indexes (comparative fit index 1, root mean-square error of approximation 0.00). Comparisons of one-factor with four-factor models in the three datasets favored the one-factor model structure. The selection of variables to represent the different metabolic syndrome components and model specification explained why previous exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, respectively, failed to identify a single factor for the metabolic syndrome. CONCLUSIONS—These analyses support the current clinical definition of the metabolic syndrome, as well as the existence of a single factor that links all of the core components.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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