Affiliation:
1. Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Department of Internal Medicine, The Ohio State University College of Medicine , Columbus, OH 43202 , USA
2. Department of Family and Community Medicine, The Ohio State University of College of Medicine , Columbus, OH 43202 , USA
3. Department of Biomedical Informatics, Center for Biostatistics, The Ohio State University , Columbus, OH 43210 , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and adiposity measures are independently associated with the development of diabetes in African American adults. However, studies have not examined the combined interaction between RAAS and adiposity measures in relation to diabetes risk in African American adults.
Objective
We examined the longitudinal association of combined RAAS and adiposity measures with incident diabetes among African American adults in the Jackson Heart Study.
Methods
African American adults were assessed at baseline (2000-2004) and over 12 years of follow-up. RAAS, anthropometric (waist circumference [WC], body mass index), and adipokine (adiponectin, leptin, leptin to adiponectin ratio [LAR]) measures were collected at baseline. Aldosterone, WC, and LAR were chosen as the best predictor variables. The final model, adjusting for age, sex, education, occupation, systolic blood pressure, smoking, physical activity and RAAS-altering medications, incorporated these variables and their interactions (WC*aldosterone + LAR*aldosterone) to explore their impact on incident diabetes.
Results
Among 3220 participants without diabetes at baseline, there were 554 incident cases over a median follow-up period of 7.5 years. Aldosterone, WC, and LAR were positively associated with incident diabetes (all P < .05). A significant interaction was found between WC and aldosterone, with a greater association among individuals with lower WC. This interaction was significant in participants with prediabetes but not in those with normoglycemia. No significant interaction was found between log-LAR and aldosterone with risk of incident diabetes.
Conclusion
Higher aldosterone in participants is associated with greater risk of diabetes, particularly among individuals with prediabetes and lower WC.
Funder
Jackson State University
Tougaloo College
Mississippi State Department of Health
University of Mississippi Medical Center
NHLBI
NIMHD
NIDDK
NIH
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program
NCATS
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