Endogenous sex steroid hormones and glucose in a South‐Asian population without diabetes: the Metabolic Syndrome and Atherosclerosis in South‐Asians Living in America pilot study
Needham, B. L.; Kim, C.; Mukherjee, B.; Bagchi, P.; Stanczyk, F. Z.; Kanaya, A. M.
2015-09
Citation
Needham, B. L.; Kim, C.; Mukherjee, B.; Bagchi, P.; Stanczyk, F. Z.; Kanaya, A. M. (2015). "Endogenous sex steroid hormones and glucose in a South‐Asian population without diabetes: the Metabolic Syndrome and Atherosclerosis in South‐Asians Living in America pilot study." Diabetic Medicine 32(9): 1193-1200.
Abstract
AimsTo examine the associations between endogenous sex steroid hormones (oestradiol, testosterone and sex hormone‐binding globulin) with diabetes risk in a South‐Asian population living in the USA.MethodsWe used data from the Metabolic Syndrome and Atherosclerosis in South‐Asians Living in America pilot study. The analytical sample included 60 women and 45 men of Asian Indian origin living in the San Francisco Bay Area, who were free from diabetes and cardiovascular disease and did not use exogenous sex steroids. Sex steroid hormone levels were assessed by validated conventional radioimmunoassays, and visceral and hepatic adiposity were assessed by computed tomography. We used multivariable regression to examine the association between endogenous sex steroid hormone levels (log‐transformed) and fasting glucose and 2‐h glucose levels in a series of sex‐stratified models adjusted for age, waist circumference, visceral and hepatic adiposity, and insulin resistance.ResultsIn age‐adjusted models, lower levels of sex hormone‐binding globulin (β = −0.18, 95% CI −0.30, −0.06) and higher levels of free testosterone (β = 0.14, 95% CI 0.02, 0.26) were associated with elevated fasting glucose levels in South‐Asian women, whereas lower levels of sex hormone‐binding globulin (β = −0.14, 95% CI −0.26, −0.02) and lower levels of total testosterone (β = −0.12, 95% CI −0.24, 0.00) were associated with elevated fasting glucose levels in South‐Asian men. Adjustment for waist circumference, visceral adiposity and insulin resistance attenuated most of these associations, while adjustment for hepatic adiposity strengthened some of the observed associations. Similar results were found for 2‐h glucose levels.ConclusionsResults were consistent with previous research, which suggests that endogenous sex steroid hormones are a risk factor for diabetes across multiple race/ethnic groups. Additional studies are needed to determine whether visceral fat is a mediator or confounder of associations between sex steroid hormone and glucose levels.What's new?This is the first study to examine the associations between sex steroid hormones and glucose levels in a population‐based sample of South‐Asian people without diabetes living in the USA.This work adds to a small body of literature examining sex steroid hormones in South‐Asian people, a population at high risk for dysglycaemia.Although sex hormone‐binding globulin has been hypothesized to be a marker of hepatic adiposity, associations of sex hormone‐binding globulin with glucose were not attenuated by hepatic adiposity.Publisher
Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Academic Press
ISSN
0742-3071 1464-5491
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