Nutritional Epidemiology Group, School of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
Leeds Institute of Medical Research, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
J Nutr. 2022 Oct 6;152(10):2186-2197. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxac163.
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is the most common global pregnancy complication; however, prevalence varies substantially between ethnicities, with South Asians (SAs) experiencing up to 3 times the risk of the disease compared with white Europeans (WEs). Factors driving this discrepancy are unclear, although the metabolome is of great interest as GDM is known to be characterized by metabolic dysregulation.
The primary aim was to characterize and compare the metabolic profiles of GDM in SA and WE women (at <28 wk of gestation) from the Born in Bradford (BIB) prospective birth cohort in the United Kingdom.
In total, 146 fasting serum metabolites, from 2,668 pregnant WE and 2,671 pregnant SA women (average BMI 26.2 kg/m2, average age 27.3 y) were analyzed using partial least squares discriminatory analyses to characterize GDM status. Linear associations between metabolite values and post-oral glucose tolerance test measures of dysglycemia (fasting glucose and 2 h postglucose) were also examined.
Seven metabolites associated with GDM status in both ethnicities (variable importance in projection ≥1), whereas 6 additional metabolites associated with GDM only in WE women. Unique metabolic profiles were observed in healthy-weight women who later developed GDM, with distinct metabolite patterns identified by ethnicity and BMI status. Of the metabolite values analyzed in relation to dysglycemia, lactate, histidine, apolipoprotein A1, HDL cholesterol, and HDL2 cholesterol associated with decreased glucose concentration, whereas DHA and the diameter of very low-density lipoprotein particles (nm) associated with increased glucose concertation in WE women, and in SAs, albumin alone associated with decreased glucose concentration.
This study shows that the metabolic risk profile for GDM differs between WE and SA women enrolled in BiB in the United Kingdom. This suggests that etiology of the disease differs between ethnic groups and that ethnic-appropriate prevention strategies may be beneficial.
妊娠糖尿病(GDM)是最常见的全球妊娠并发症;然而,不同种族之间的患病率差异很大,南亚人(SAs)患该病的风险比白种欧洲人(WE)高 3 倍。导致这种差异的因素尚不清楚,尽管代谢组学非常重要,因为众所周知,GDM 的特征是代谢失调。
本研究的主要目的是描述和比较英国博恩在布拉德福德(BIB)前瞻性出生队列中,处于<28 孕周的 SA 和 WE 孕妇的 GDM 代谢特征。
共分析了来自 2668 名 WE 孕妇和 2671 名 SA 孕妇(平均 BMI 为 26.2kg/m2,平均年龄为 27.3 岁)的 146 种空腹血清代谢物,采用偏最小二乘判别分析来描述 GDM 状态。还检查了代谢物值与口服葡萄糖耐量试验(OGTT)后血糖和 2 小时血糖之间的线性关联。
在两种族中,有 7 种代谢物与 GDM 状态相关(投影变量重要性≥1),而另外 6 种代谢物仅与 WE 女性的 GDM 相关。在后来发生 GDM 的健康体重女性中观察到独特的代谢特征,根据种族和 BMI 状态确定了不同的代谢物模式。在所分析的与血糖异常相关的代谢物值中,乳酸盐、组氨酸、载脂蛋白 A1、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇和高密度脂蛋白 2 胆固醇与血糖浓度降低相关,而在 WE 女性中,DHA 和极低密度脂蛋白颗粒直径(nm)与血糖浓度升高相关,而在 SAs 中,仅白蛋白与血糖浓度降低相关。
本研究表明,英国 BIB 中招募的 WE 和 SA 女性的 GDM 代谢风险谱不同。这表明该疾病的病因在不同种族之间存在差异,并且针对特定种族的预防策略可能是有益的。