Author:
Tahir Amna,Asghar Kashif,Shafiq Waqas,Batool Hijab,Khan Dilawar,Chughtai Omar,Chaudhary Safee Ullah
Abstract
AbstractHyperglycemia is an outcome of dysregulated glucose homeostasis in the human body and may induce chronic elevation of blood glucose levels. Lifestyle factors such as overnutrition, physical inactivity, and psychosocials coupled with systemic low-grade inflammation have a strong negative impact on glucose homeostasis, in particular, insulin sensitivity. Together, these factors contribute to the pathophysiology of diabetes (DM) and expanding landscape of its prevalence regionally and globally. The rapid rise in the prevalence of type 2 diabetes, therefore, underscores the need for its early diagnosis and treatment. In this work, we have evaluated the discriminatory capacity of different diagnostic markers including inflammatory biomolecules and RBC (Red Blood Cell) indices in predicting the risk of hyperglycemia and borderline hyperglycemia. For that, 208,137 clinical diagnostic entries obtained over five years from Chugtai Labs, Pakistan, were retrospectively evaluated. The dataset included HbA1c (n = 142,011), complete blood count (CBC, n = 84,263), fasting blood glucose (FBG, n = 35,363), and C-reactive protein (CRP, n = 9035) tests. Our results provide four glycemic predictive models for two cohorts HbA1c and FBG) each having an overall predictive accuracy of more than 80% (p-value < 0.0001). Next, multivariate analysis (MANOVA) followed by univariate analysis (ANOVA) was employed to identify predictors with significant discriminatory capacity for different levels of glycemia. We show that the interplay between inflammation, hyperglycemic-induced derangements in RBC indices, and altered glucose homeostasis could be employed for prognosticating hyperglycemic outcomes. Our results then conclude a glycemic predictor with high sensitivity and specificity, employing inflammatory markers coupled with RBC indices, to predict glycemic outcomes (ROC p-value < 0.0001). Taken together, this study outlines a predictor of glycemic outcomes which could assist as a prophylactic intervention in predicting the early onset of hyperglycemia and borderline hyperglycemia.
Funder
Higher Education Commision, Pakistan
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
1. Moini, J. Pathophysiology of diabetes. Epidemiol. Diabetes https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-816864-6.00003-1 (2019).
2. Lee, P. G. & Halter, J. B. The pathophysiology of hyperglycemia in older adults: Clinical considerations. Diabetes Care 40, 444–452 (2017).
3. Wild, S., Roglic, G., Green, A., Sicree, R. & King, H. Global prevalence of diabetes estimates for the year 2000 and projections for 2030. Diabetes Care 27, 1047–1053 (2004).
4. International Diabetes Federation. Pakistan Diabetes report 2000–2045. https://www.idf.org/our-network/regions-members/mi.
5. Diabetes Statistics in Pakistan. Diabetic’s Institute Pakistan.