Scientific Reports (Mar 2017)

Serum resistin is causally related to mortality risk in patients with type 2 diabetes: preliminary evidences from genetic data

  • Andrea Fontana,
  • Lorena Ortega Moreno,
  • Olga Lamacchia,
  • Concetta De Bonis,
  • Lucia Salvemini,
  • Salvatore De Cosmo,
  • Mauro Cignarelli,
  • Massimiliano Copetti,
  • Vincenzo Trischitta,
  • Claudia Menzaghi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00138-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Resistin has been firmly associated with all-cause mortality. We investigated, whether, in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), this association is sustained by a cause-effect relationship. A genotype risk score (GRS), created by summing the number of resistin increasing alleles of two genome-wide association studies (GWAS)-derived single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), serum resistin measurements and all-cause death records were obtained in 1,479 (403 events/12,454 person-years), patients with T2D from three cohorts, Gargano Heart Study-prospective design (n = 350), Gargano Mortality Study (n = 698) and Foggia Mortality Study (n = 431), from Italy. GRS was strongly associated with serum resistin in a non-linear fashion (overall p = 3.5 * 10−7) with effect size modest for GRS = 1 and 2 and much higher for GRS >3, with respect to GRS = 0. A significant non-linear association was observed also between GRS and all-cause mortality (overall p = 3.3 * 10−2), with a low effect size for GRS = 1 and 2, and nearly doubled for GRS ≥ 3, with respect to GRS = 0. Based on the above-reported associations, each genetic equivalent SD increase in log-resistin levels showed a causal hazard ratio of all-cause mortality equal to 2.17 (95%CI: 1.22–3.87), thus providing evidence for a causal role of resistin in shaping the risk of mortality in diabetic patients.