Kalyani Rita R, Metter E Jeffrey, Xue Qian-Li, Egan Josephine M, Chia Chee W, Studenski Stephanie, Shaffer Nancy Chiles, Golden Sherita, Al-Sofiani Mohammed, Florez Hermes, Ferrucci Luigi
Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Center on Aging and Health, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Endocr Soc. 2020 Apr 30;4(7):bvaa043. doi: 10.1210/jendso/bvaa043. eCollection 2020 Jul 1.
Older adults have the greatest burden of diabetes; however, the contribution of age-related muscle loss to its development remains unclear.
We assessed the relationship of lean body mass with aging to incident diabetes in community-dwelling adults.
We studied participants in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging with median follow-up of 7 years (range 1-16). Cox proportional hazard models with age as the time scale were used. Time-dependent lean body mass measures were updated at each follow-up visit available.
Participants included 871 men and 984 women without diabetes who had ≥ 1 assessment of body composition using dual x-ray absorptiometry.
Incident diabetes, defined as self-reported history and use of glucose-lowering medications; or fasting plasma glucose ≥ 126 mg/dL and 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test glucose ≥ 200 mg/dL either at the same visit or 2 consecutive visits.
The baseline mean [standard deviation] age was 58.9 [17.3] years. Men and women with a higher percentage of total lean body mass had lower fasting and 2-hour glucose levels, and less prediabetes (all < 0.01). Among men, comparing highest versus lowest quartiles, percentage of total lean body mass (hazard ratio [HR], 0.46; 95% confidence interval, 0.22-0.97), percentage leg lean mass (HR, 0.38; 0.15-0.96), and lean-to-fat mass ratio (HR, 0.39; 0.17-0.89) were inversely associated with incident diabetes after accounting for race and attenuated after adjustment for height and weight. Conversely, absolute total lean body mass was positively associated with incident diabetes among women, with similar trends in men. No associations were observed with muscle strength or quality.
Relatively lower lean body mass with aging is associated with incident diabetes in men and partially related to anthropometrics, but not so in women.
老年人患糖尿病的负担最重;然而,与年龄相关的肌肉量减少对糖尿病发展的影响仍不清楚。
我们评估了社区居住成年人中瘦体重与衰老和新发糖尿病之间的关系。
我们研究了巴尔的摩纵向衰老研究中的参与者,中位随访时间为7年(范围1 - 16年)。使用以年龄为时间尺度的Cox比例风险模型。在每次可获得的随访时更新随时间变化的瘦体重测量值。
参与者包括871名男性和984名无糖尿病的女性,他们使用双能X线吸收法进行了≥1次身体成分评估。
新发糖尿病,定义为自我报告的病史和使用降糖药物;或在同一次就诊或连续两次就诊时,空腹血糖≥126mg/dL且口服葡萄糖耐量试验2小时血糖≥200mg/dL。
基线平均[标准差]年龄为58.9[17.3]岁。总瘦体重百分比更高的男性和女性空腹及2小时血糖水平更低,且糖尿病前期情况更少(均P < 0.01)。在男性中,比较最高与最低四分位数,总瘦体重百分比(风险比[HR],0.46;95%置信区间,0.22 - 0.97)、腿部瘦体重百分比(HR,0.38;0.15 - 0.96)和瘦脂肪比(HR,0.39;0.17 - 0.89)在考虑种族后与新发糖尿病呈负相关,在调整身高和体重后减弱。相反,绝对总瘦体重在女性中与新发糖尿病呈正相关,男性中也有类似趋势。未观察到与肌肉力量或质量的关联。
随着年龄增长相对较低的瘦体重与男性新发糖尿病相关,且部分与人体测量学有关,但在女性中并非如此。