© 2001 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc.
Factors Predicting the Age When Type 2 Diabetes Is Diagnosed in Hong Kong Chinese SubjectsDepartment of Medicine and Therapeutics, the Prince of Wales Hospital, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong SAR, China
OBJECTIVETo examine the factors predicting age at diagnosis of type 2 diabetes in Hong Kong Chinese. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSThe relationships between age at diagnosis and parental history of diabetes as well as an array of clinical and metabolic factors were examined using a hospital clinic-based diabetes registry involving 3,414 index patients with type 2 diabetes. Patterns of age at diagnosis in successive generations were also examined using 21 affected child-parent pairs and 7 affected child-parent-grandparent trios.
RESULTSApproximately 29% of the index patients were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes at CONCLUSIONSOur data indicate that both familial (possibly genetic) and metabolic factors affect the age of onset of type 2 diabetes in the Chinese population. The results also suggest an onset and progression pattern of the disease that is compatible with the phenomenon of anticipation.
Abbreviations: dBP, diastolic blood pressure FPG, fasting plasma glucose MODY, maturity-onset diabetes of the young sBP, systolic blood pressure WHR, waist-to-hip ratio
Type 2 diabetes is one of the major noncommunicable diseases worldwide, and its complications have significant socioeconomic impacts. Classically, type 2 diabetes develops predominantly in older populations. However, there is increasing evidence for a high prevalence of type 2 diabetes in young people, particularly in non-Caucasians (1). Early onset of type 2 diabetes appears to be heterogeneous in etiologies. Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) is a monogenic disease inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, whereas autoimmune diabetes may have atypical presentations (2,3). In Hong Kong Chinese, MODY, typical type 1 diabetes, and atypical autoimmune diabetes do occur, but they only account for a small proportion of the overall type 2 diabetic population (24). In a recent segregation study involving 2,310 index patients, we observed the evidence for familial clustering, maternal influence, a male sexspecific paternal effect, and an association between younger age at diagnosis and a positive parental history of diabetes (5). Our data, together with those from Caucasian populations (68), implicate that parental diabetes may contribute to a younger onset of type 2 diabetes. In the present study, we further investigated the influences of both parental and metabolic factors on onset age of type 2 diabetes. Patterns of onset age among successive generations in families segregating type 2 diabetes were also examined.
Subjects Approval for the study was obtained from the Clinical Research Ethics Committee, the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Informed consent was obtained from each of the participants. All patients were recruited at the Diabetes Center, the Prince of Wales Hospital of the Hong Kong Special Administration Region. The hospital is a regional teaching hospital with a catchment population of 1 million with typical demographic and social class distributions. Most of the inhabitants are southern Chinese in origin. Because of the lack of a long-term health care financing policy, the majority of people in Hong Kong do not have medical insurance for chronic diseases, such as diabetes and hypertension. As a result, most of these patients seek medical care at the public hospitals where only nominal fees are charged.
Patients involved in the study were recruited from our diabetes registry (5). Type 2 diabetes was diagnosed according to the 1985 World Health Organization criteria (9). For the study, 3,414 patients who attended our clinic between 1995 and 1999 were consecutively selected from the diabetes database. All the patients reported the diabetes status of both of their parents as well as their children if they had any. Patients who were diagnosed for 3 years or less by the time of their registration and had already been treated with insulin were not included. Although MODY and atypical autoimmune diabetes were not specifically excluded, they are uncommon in the Chinese population (2,3). Early- and late-onset were hereby defined as diagnosis at
Clinical and biochemical measurements
Statistical analysis
Among the 3,414 index cases, 973 (29%) were early-onset patients. The late-onset patients were older and had higher WHR, sBP, and dBP as well as higher levels of total and LDL cholesterol (P < 0.01) than the early-onset patients. Although there was a female preponderance in our overall diabetes population, the early-onset patients had a higher male-to-female ratio and higher rates of parental history of diabetes than the late-onset patients (all at P < 0.01) (Table 1). However, the early- and late-onset patients had comparable rates of albuminuria (Table 1).
Using linear regression analysis (Table 2), we found that male sex; higher HbA1c, WHR, and sBP; and lower levels of HDL cholesterol, as well as a positive paternal and maternal history of diabetes, predicted younger age at diagnosis in the overall index patients. In the male group, factors predicting younger age at diagnosis were higher HbA1c and sBP a positive paternal history of diabetes. In the female group, the predictors for younger age at diagnosis were higher HbA1c, WHR, and sBP and paternal and maternal history of diabetes. On the other hand, higher BMI and dBP consistently predicted older age at diagnosis, except that BMI was not identified as a predictor in the female group.
In the 21 affected child-parent pairs, all the index patients were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes at a younger age (21 years on average) than their parents (P < 0.01) (Table 3). In the affected trios, a decrease in age at diagnosis in successive generations was noted, except in index patient-child in family 6 and index patient-parent in family 7 (Table 4).
Our data demonstrate that an early occurrence of type 2 diabetes is common, and onset age of type 2 diabetes is under the influences of multiple factors in the Chinese population.
Currently, there is a lack of putative criteria to define early and late onset of the disease. A cutoff age of 35 or 40 years at diagnosis was commonly used to separate the two groups arbitrarily. In an early study involving Caucasian patients, Laakso and Pyorala (12) investigated the age at diagnosis and types of diabetes in Caucasians and proposed a cutoff age of Moreover, age at diagnosis was found to be inversely correlated with a positive parental history of diabetes (Tables 1 and 2), indicating that familial (possibly genetic) factors may promote younger onset of the disease (68). The finding that younger age at diagnosis was also correlated with higher HbA1c levels (Table 2) suggests that younger-onset patients had poorer glycemic control, implicating that they might have more severe clinical presentation of type 2 diabetes. Data from the family investigations (Tables 3 and 4) revealed a trend of decrease in age at diagnosis in successive generations. These observations, taken together, suggest an onset and progression pattern of the disease that is compatible with the concept of anticipation that describes younger-onset and/or more severe symptom(s) in successive generations of a disease with genetic susceptibility (1315). At the molecular level, anticipation may be associated with genomic instability, such as trinucleotide repeat expansions (13,14). In Huntingtons disease, anticipation may be inherited through the male line (15). In this respect, it is interesting that we have observed a paternal effect on the development of type 2 diabetes in this Chinese population (5).
In addition to parental history of diabetes, younger age of onset of type 2 diabetes was also found to be associated with male sex, higher WHR, and sBP and lower HDL cholesterol levels (Tables 14 The prevalence of type 2 diabetes is increasing worldwide. In developing countries, the increase in diabetes prevalence occurs predominantly among people in and before middle age (1,17). This trend is also reflected in our diabetes registry by the high percentage of early-onset cases and a relatively young mean age at diagnosis (49 years) (Table 1). Changes in lifestyle because of Westernization may promote deterioration(s) in metabolic profiles, i.e., more central obesity, higher sBP, and lower HDL cholesterol. Poor metabolic profiles may interact with familial factors such as parental diabetes (possibly genetic) to promote younger onset of type 2 diabetes, resulting in the observed increasing prevalence of the disease in and before middle age (Table 1) (1,17). In this sense, metabolic factors might also contribute to the observed successive decrease in age at diagnosis in the family samples (Tables 3 and 4)the possible anticipation. We are also aware that possible bias may affect the analysis. Younger age at diagnosis may reflect an increased awareness of diabetes in younger generations, especially with the presence of family history of diabetes. Data from affected child-parent pairs may not be adequate for anticipation analysis because the natural age truncations among generations may cause bias (18). More studies using population-based samples and/or molecular approaches are required for more informative data about patterns of onset and progression of the disease, although a link between trinucleotide repeats and the development of type 2 diabetes was not established in a genome-wide scan involving Pima Indians (19). Some parameters (i.e., sBP and WHR) were found to be inversely associated with the age at diagnosis in patients (Table 2). These associations are less likely to be biased by age factor because they are positively associated with age in Hong Kong Chinese in general (20). However, possible effects of bias on the associations of some other metabolic parameters with younger or older age at diagnosis cannot be fully excluded in the regression analyses. In conclusion, our data indicate that early onset of type 2 diabetes is common in the Chinese population and suggest that onset of type 2 diabetes may be influenced by familial (possibly genetic) and metabolic factors. The results also suggest a disease-onset and progression pattern that is compatible with the phenomenon of anticipation.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Shao Lee, Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, The Prince of Wales Hospital, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong SAR, China. E-mail: shaochin{at}citmail.com or b200387{at}mailserv.cuhk.edu.hk. Received for publication 10 July 2000 and accepted in revised form 28 December 2000. A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.
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