PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

New measure of insulin sensitivity predicts cardiovascular disease better than HOMA estimated insulin resistance.

  • Kavita Venkataraman,
  • Chin Meng Khoo,
  • Melvin K S Leow,
  • Eric Y H Khoo,
  • Anburaj V Isaac,
  • Vitali Zagorodnov,
  • Suresh A Sadananthan,
  • Sendhil S Velan,
  • Yap Seng Chong,
  • Peter Gluckman,
  • Jeannette Lee,
  • Agus Salim,
  • E Shyong Tai,
  • Yung Seng Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e74410

Abstract

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ContextAccurate assessment of insulin sensitivity may better identify individuals at increased risk of cardio-metabolic diseases.ObjectivesTo examine whether a combination of anthropometric, biochemical and imaging measures can better estimate insulin sensitivity index (ISI) and provide improved prediction of cardio-metabolic risk, in comparison to HOMA-IR.Design and participantsHealthy male volunteers (96 Chinese, 80 Malay, 77 Indian), 21 to 40 years, body mass index 18-30 kg/m(2). Predicted ISI (ISI-cal) was generated using 45 randomly selected Chinese through stepwise multiple linear regression, and validated in the rest using non-parametric correlation (Kendall's tau τ). In an independent longitudinal cohort, ISI-cal and HOMA-IR were compared for prediction of diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD), using ROC curves.SettingThe study was conducted in a university academic medical centre.Outcome measuresISI measured by hyperinsulinemic euglycemic glucose clamp, along with anthropometric measurements, biochemical assessment and imaging; incident diabetes and CVD.ResultsA combination of fasting insulin, serum triglycerides and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) provided the best estimate of clamp-derived ISI (adjusted R(2) 0.58 versus 0.32 HOMA-IR). In an independent cohort, ROC areas under the curve were 0.77±0.02 ISI-cal versus 0.76±0.02 HOMA-IR (p>0.05) for incident diabetes, and 0.74±0.03 ISI-cal versus 0.61±0.03 HOMA-IR (pConclusionsTriglycerides and WHR, combined with fasting insulin levels, provide a better estimate of current insulin resistance state and improved identification of individuals with future risk of CVD, compared to HOMA-IR. This may be useful for estimating insulin sensitivity and cardio-metabolic risk in clinical and epidemiological settings.