Low plasma adiponectin in risk of type 2 diabetes: Observational analysis and one- and two-sample Mendelian randomization analyses in 756,219 individuals
Diabetes Aug 27, 2021
Nielsen MB, Çolak Y, Benn M, et al. - The results showed that low plasma adiponectin is correlated with an elevated risk of type 2 diabetes, an association that could represent a causal relationship.
Researchers analyzed 30,045 Copenhagen individuals observationally (1,751 type 2 diabetes; plasma adiponectin), 96,903 Copenhagen individuals using one-sample Mendelian randomization (5,012 type 2 diabetes; five genetic variants), and 659,316 Europeans (ADIPOGen, GERA, DIAGRAM, UK Biobank) using two-sample Mendelian randomization (62,892 type 2 diabetes; ten genetic variants).
The results demonstrated that observationally, and in comparison to individuals with median plasma adiponectin of 28.9μg/mL(4th quartile), multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios for type 2 diabetes were 1.42(95% CI:1.18-1.72) for 19.2μg/mL(3rd quartile), 2.21(1.84-2.66) for 13.9μg/mL(2nd quartile), and 4.05(3.38-4.86) for 9.2μg/mL(1st quartile).
As per the results, 3%, 7%, 11%, and 20% were the corresponding cumulative incidences for diabetes at age 70.
Although genetic, causal risk ratios per 1 unit log-transformed lower plasma adiponectin were 1.13(0.83-1.53) in one-sample Mendelian randomization and 1.26(1.01-1.57) in two-sample Mendelian randomization, a 1μg/mL lower plasma adiponectin conferred a hazard ratio for type 2 diabetes of 1.07(1.06-1.09).
-
Exclusive Write-ups & Webinars by KOLs
-
Daily Quiz by specialty
-
Paid Market Research Surveys
-
Case discussions, News & Journals' summaries