Population-Based Study of Diabetes and Risk Characteristics in Turkey

Results of the Turkish Diabetes Epidemiology Study (TURDEP)

  1. Ilhan Satman, MD1,
  2. Temel Yilmaz, MD1,
  3. Ahmet Sengül, MD1,
  4. Serpil Salman, MD1,
  5. Fatih Salman, MD1,
  6. Sevil Uygur2,
  7. Irfan Bastar, PHD1,
  8. Yildiz Tütüncü1,
  9. Mehmet Sargin, MD1,
  10. Nevin Dinççag, MD1,
  11. Kubilay Karsidag, MD1,
  12. Sibel Kalaça, MD3,
  13. Cihangir Özcan, MD4,
  14. Hilary King, MD, DSc5 and
  15. The TURDEP Group
  1. 1Division of Diabetes, Department of Internal Medicine, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkey
  2. 2State Institute of Statistics, Ankara, Turkey
  3. 3Department of Public Health, Marmara University Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul, Turkey
  4. 4Ministry of Health, Ankara, Turkey
  5. 5Department of Noncommunicable Disease Management, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVES—To investigate for the first time the prevalence of diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) nationwide in Turkey; to assess regional variations and relationships between glucose intolerance and lifestyle and physical risk factors.

    RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—The Turkish Diabetes Epidemiology Study (TURDEP) is a cross-sectional, population-based survey that included 24,788 subjects (age ≥20 years, women 55%, response 85%). Glucose tolerance was classified according to World Health Organization recommendations on the basis of 2-h blood glucose values.

    RESULTS—Crude prevalence of diabetes was 7.2% (previously undiagnosed, 2.3%) and of IGT, 6.7% (age-standardized to world and European populations, 7.9 and 7.0%). Both were more frequent in women than men (P < 0.0001) and in those living in urban rather than rural communities (P < 0.001). Prevalence rates of hypertension and obesity were 29 and 22%, respectively. Both were more common among women than men (P < 0.0001). Prevalence of diabetes and IGT increased with rising BMI, waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), and waist girth (P < 0.0001). Multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that age, BMI, WHR, familial diabetes, and hypertension were independently associated with diabetes, age, BMI, WHR, familial diabetes, and hypertension with IGT (except for familial diabetes in women with IGT). Education was related to diabetes in men but was protective for diabetes and IGT in women. Socioeconomic status appeared to decrease the risk of IGT in men while it increased the risk in women. Smoking had a protective effect for IGT in both sexes.

    CONCLUSIONS—Diabetes and IGT are moderately common in Turkey by international standards. Associations with obesity and hypertension have been confirmed. Other lifestyle factors had a variable relationship with glucose tolerance.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Ilhan Satman, MD, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Diabetes Division, P.K. 75, Millet Caddesi, Çapa 34 272, Istanbul, Turkey. E-mail: satmandiabet{at}superonline.com.

      Received for publication 12 December 2001 and accepted in revised form 31 May 2002.

      A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.

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