Increased Mortality Risks of Pre-Diabetes (Impaired Fasting Glucose) in Taiwan
- Chi Pang Wen, MD, DRPH1,
- Ting Yuan David Cheng, MS2,
- Shan Pou Tsai, PHD3,
- Hui Ling Hsu, MS1 and
- Shu Li Wang, PHD4
- 1Division of Health Policy Research, National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, Republic of China
- 2Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland
- 3University of Texas, Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas
- 4Division of Environmental Health and Occupational Medicine, National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, Republic of China
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Chi Pang Wen, 35, Keyan Road, Zhunan Town, Miaoli County 350, Taiwan, ROC. E-mail: cwengood{at}nhri.org.tw
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—The objective of this article was to assess mortality risks at different levels of fasting blood glucose (FBG) in Taiwan, with particular attention to those pre-diabetic subjects with impaired fasting glucose (IFG).
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Governmental employees and schoolteachers were followed up for an average of 11 years. With the use of Cox regression analyses, mortality risks were calculated for 36,386 subjects, aged 40–69.
RESULTS—FBG ≥110 mg/dl was associated with increased mortality risks for all causes, cardiovascular diseases (CVD), and diabetes. IFG, when defined as 110–125 mg/dl, was associated with a significant increase for CVD and/or diabetes mortality. These mortality risks remained elevated when known CVD risk factors were adjusted for. The IFG group shared risk factor characteristics more with the FBG ≥126 mg/dl group than with the FBG <110 mg/dl group. When IFG was defined as 100–125 mg/dl, the number of subjects quadrupled, but mortality risks diminished substantially because of the inclusion of 100–109 mg/dl group. The lowest FBG group, 50–75 mg/dl, had a significant 2-fold risk from all causes.
CONCLUSIONS—There was an overall J-shaped relationship between all-cause mortality and FBG. IFG, when defined as 110–125 mg/dl, is an independent risk factor and should be aggressively treated as a disease because its subsequent mortality risks for CVD and diabetes were significantly increased. The newly defined IFG at 100–125 mg/dl did not have the predictive power for later increases in CVD or diabetes mortality.
- ADA, American Diabetes Association
- CVD, cardiovascular disease
- DBP, diastolic blood pressure
- DECODE, Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe
- FPG, fasting plasma glucose
- IFG, impaired fasting glucose
- IGT, impaired glucose tolerance
- SBP, systolic blood pressure
- WHO, World Health Organization
Footnotes
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A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.
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- Accepted July 22, 2005.
- Received March 13, 2005.
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