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The metabolic syndrome as a tool for predicting future diabetes : the AusDiab study

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journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Adrian CameronAdrian Cameron, D Magliano, P Zimmet, T Welborn, S Colagiuri, A Tonkin, J Shaw
Objective. To compare the ability of the metabolic syndrome (MetS), a diabetes prediction model (DPM), a noninvasive risk questionnaire and individual glucose measurements to predict future diabetes.

Design. Five-year longitudinal cohort study. Tools tested included MetS definitions [World Health Organization, International Diabetes Federation, ATPIII and European Group for the study of Insulin Resistance (EGIR)], the FINnish Diabetes RIsk SCore risk questionnaire, the DPM, fasting and 2-h post load plasma glucose.

Setting. Adult Australian population.

Subjects. A total of 5842 men and women without diabetes ≥25 years. Response 58%. A total of 224 incident cases of diabetes.

Results.
In receiver operating characteristic curve analysis, the MetS was not a better predictor of incident diabetes than the DPM or measurement of glucose. The risk for diabetes among those with prediabetes but not MetS was almost triple that of those with MetS but not prediabetes (9.0% vs. 3.4%). Adjusted for component parts, the MetS was not a significant predictor of incident diabetes, except for EGIR in men [OR 2.1 (95% CI 1.2–3.7)].

Conclusions.
A single fasting glucose measurement may be more effective and efficient than published definitions of the MetS or other risk constructs in predicting incident diabetes. Diagnosis of the MetS did not confer increased risk for incident diabetes independent of its individual components, with an exception for EGIR in men. Given these results, debate surrounding the public health utility of a MetS diagnosis, at least for identification of incident diabetes, is required.

History

Journal

Journal of internal medicine

Volume

264

Issue

2

Pagination

177 - 186

Publisher

Blackwell Scientific Publications

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

0954-6820

eISSN

1365-2796

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Blackwell Publishing Ltd.