一级亲属
医学
非酒精性脂肪肝
内科学
糖尿病
家族史
内分泌学
胰岛素抵抗
2型糖尿病
脂肪肝
人口
疾病
逐步回归
胃肠病学
环境卫生
作者
Xiang Hu,Weihui Yu,Lijuan Yang,Wei Pan,Ke Xu,Xueqin Chen,Qianqian Li,Yaozhang Zhang,Gang Chen,Junping Wen,Xuejiang Gu,Xingxing Zhang
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jdiacomp.2021.108083
摘要
The first-degree relatives of patients with diabetes (FDRs) share a common genetic background with patients with diabetes. Insulin resistance is recognized as a common contributor to diabetes and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The present study aimed to investigate the association between a first-degree family history of diabetes (FHD) and NAFLD and the influence of glucose metabolic status. The present work analyzed a part of the baseline data of the REACTION study conducted in a community population. A total of 11,162 participants with an average age of 55.57 ± 9.66 years were enrolled, including 9870 non-FDRs and 1292 FDRs. First-degree FHD was defined as at least one patient with diabetes among parents, siblings or children. The fatty liver index (FLI) was calculated to identify NAFLD. The proportions of subjects without NAFLD, with intermediate FLI, and with NAFLD differed significantly between non-FDRs and FDRs (P < 0.001). FLI was one of the metabolic factors independently associated with first-degree FHD (P = 0.006). Multivariate variance analysis revealed positive associations of first-degree FHD and glucose metabolic status (both P < 0.001) with FLI, which were independent of each other (P for interaction = 0.182). Multiple stepwise linear regression analysis identified that first-degree FHD was independently and positively associated with FLI in men, premenopausal women, and postmenopausal women (all P < 0.05). A first-degree FHD was an independent risk factor for NAFLD. Regardless of the status of glucose metabolism, FDRs were more susceptible to NAFLD.
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