Bimodality in Blood Glucose Distribution
Is it universal?
- Teck-Onn Lim, FRCP, M MED STAT1,
- Rugayah Bakri, MPH1,
- Zaki Morad, FRCP2 and
- Maimunah A. Hamid, MPH3
- 1Clinical Research Centre, Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- 2Department of Nephrology, Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
- 3Public Health Institute, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—Bimodality in blood glucose (BG) distribution has been demonstrated in several populations with a high prevalence of diabetes and obesity. However, other population studies had not found bimodality, thus casting doubt on its universality. We address this question in four ethnic populations—namely Malay, Chinese, Indian, and the indigenous people of Borneo.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—A national health survey was conducted in Malaysia in 1996. A total of 18,397 subjects aged ≥30 years had post-challenge BG measurements taken. To test whether BG was consistent with a bimodal distribution, we fitted unimodal normal and skewed distribution as well a mixture of two normal distributions to the data by age and ethnic groups.
RESULTS—Age-specific prevalence of diabetes varied from 1.3 to 26.3%. In all ethnic/age groups, the bimodal model fitted the log BG data better (likelihood ratio tests, all P values <0.001).
CONCLUSIONS—Bimodality in BG distribution is demonstrable even in populations with a very low prevalence of diabetes and obesity. Previous studies that found unimodality had failed to detect the second mode because of inadequate sample size, bias due to treatment of subjects with known diabetes, and inclusion of subjects with type 1 diabetes in the sample. Bimodality implies that diabetes is a distinct entity rather than an arbitrarily defined extreme end of a continuously distributed measurement.
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Teck-Onn Lim, Clinical Research Centre, 3rd Floor, Block Dermatology, Kuala Lumpur Hospital, Jalan Pahang 50586, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. E-mail: limto{at}crc.gov.my.
Received for publication 10 April 2002 and accepted in revised form 16 August 2002.
A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.
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