Peters Sanne A E, Huxley Rachel R, Woodward Mark
The George Institute for Global Health, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
School of Public Health, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia The George Institute for Global Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2016 Jan 6;6(1):e010007. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010007.
Type I and II diabetes are associated with a greater relative risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) in women than in men. Sex differences in adiposity storage may explain these findings.
A cross-sectional study of 480,813 participants from the UK Biobank without history of CVD was conducted to assess whether the difference in body size in people with and without diabetes was greater in women than in men. Age-adjusted linear regression analyses were used to obtain the mean difference in women minus men in the difference in body size measures, separately for type I and II diabetes.
Body size was higher in individuals with diabetes than in individuals without diabetes, particularly in type II diabetes. Differences in body size between individuals with and without type II diabetes were more extreme in women than in men; compared to those without type II diabetes, body mass index and waist circumference were 1.94 (95% CI 1.82 to 2.07) and 4.84 (4.53 to 5.16) higher in women than in men, respectively. In type I diabetes, body size differed to a similar extent between those with and without diabetes in women as in men. This pattern was observed across all prespecified subgroups.
Differences in body size associated with diabetes were significantly greater in women than in men in type II diabetes but not in type I diabetes. Prospective studies can determine whether sex differences in body size associated with diabetes underpin some of the excess risk for CVD in women with type II diabetes.
与男性相比,I型和II型糖尿病女性患心血管疾病(CVD)的相对风险更高。脂肪储存的性别差异可能解释了这些发现。
对来自英国生物银行的480813名无心血管疾病病史的参与者进行了一项横断面研究,以评估患糖尿病和未患糖尿病者的体型差异在女性中是否比男性更大。采用年龄调整线性回归分析,分别针对I型和II型糖尿病,得出女性与男性在体型测量差异方面的平均差值。
糖尿病患者的体型高于非糖尿病患者,尤其是II型糖尿病患者。II型糖尿病患者与非糖尿病患者之间的体型差异在女性中比在男性中更为显著;与非II型糖尿病患者相比,女性的体重指数和腰围分别比男性高1.94(95%CI 1.82至2.07)和4.84(4.53至5.16)。在I型糖尿病中,患糖尿病和未患糖尿病的女性与男性的体型差异程度相似。在所有预先指定的亚组中均观察到这种模式。
在II型糖尿病中,与糖尿病相关的体型差异在女性中比在男性中显著更大,但在I型糖尿病中并非如此。前瞻性研究可以确定与糖尿病相关的体型性别差异是否是II型糖尿病女性心血管疾病额外风险的部分原因。