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Association of lipoprotein subfractions with incidence of type 2 diabetes among five U.S. Race and Ethnic groups: The Mediators of Atherosclerosis in South Asians Living in America (MASALA) and Multi-Ethnic study of Atherosclerosis (MESA)

Abstract

Aims

We examined associations between lipoprotein subfractions and prevalent and incident T2D in two race/ethnically diverse cohort studies.

Methods

Adults self-identifying as White, Black, Chinese, Hispanic and South Asian-American without cardiovascular disease, with fasting serum, demographic, and clinical data at enrollment and after 5 years of follow-up were included. Lipoprotein subfractions were measured at enrollment using NMR spectrometry. LASSO regularized logistic regression models adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, lipid-lowering agent use, and waist circumference assessed odds of incident T2D in pooled analyses.

Results

There were 4474 participants with lipoprotein subfraction data at enrollment and 3839 participants without prevalent diabetes, mean age 62 years, 51 % women, with 234 incident T2D cases at 5 years. Triglycerides in small, dense LDL-5 [OR 1.26 (95 % CI 1.11,1.43)], VLDL triglycerides 1.30** [1.16,1.46] and phospholipids in VLDL-1 [OR 1.31 (1.17,1.47)] were associated with higher odds of incident T2D, while free cholesterol in large HDL-1 [OR 0.75 (95 % CI 0.63,0.89)] was inversely associated. The results were similar for prevalent diabetes and did not vary by race/ethnic group.

Conclusions

Composition of lipoprotein subfractions is differentially associated with prevalent and incident T2D without difference by race/ethnic group. Assessment of lipoprotein composition may enhance targeted risk reduction for T2D.

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