Cardiovascular Diabetology (Dec 2022)

Insulin resistance phenotype is associated with vascular risk phenotype at the end of the second decade of life: a population-based study

  • Janaina Maiana Abreu Barbosa,
  • Antônio Augusto Moura da Silva,
  • Rosangela Fernandes Lucena Batista,
  • Bernadete Jorge Leal Salgado,
  • Joelma Ximenes Prado Teixeira Nascimento,
  • Vanda Maria Ferreira Simões,
  • Maria Jacqueline Silva Ribeiro,
  • Marco Antonio Barbieri,
  • Alexandre Archanjo Ferraro,
  • Cecilia Claudia Costa Ribeiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-022-01724-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract We hypothesize that early events of diabetes and cardiovascular disease continuums would be ongoing and associated in adolescents. We investigated the association between the Insulin Resistance Phenotype and the Vascular Risk Phenotype at the end of the second decade of life and indirect pathways from social vulnerability, alcohol consumption, and body fat mass. It is a population-based study in the RPS cohort of 18–19 years (n = 2,515), São Luís, Brazil. The theoretical model analyzed the association between Insulin Resistance Phenotype and Vascular Risk Phenotype by sex, using structural equation modeling (SEM). The Insulin Resistance Phenotype was a latent variable deduced from the correlations of Triglyceride to HDL ratio, Triglyceride Glycemic index, and VLDL; the Vascular Risk Phenotype was deduced from Systolic Blood Pressure, Diastolic Blood Pressure, and Pulse Wave Velocity. The Insulin Resistance Phenotype was directly associated with the Vascular Risk Phenotype in males (standardized coefficient SC = 0.183; p < 0.001) and females (SC = 0.152; p < 0.001). The Insulin Resistance Phenotype was an indirect pathway in the association of alcohol consumption and higher values of fat mass index with the Vascular Risk Phenotype. VLDL presented the highest factor loading, appearing as a marker of insulin resistance linked to cardiovascular risk in young people. Lower values of socioeconomic status, harmful use of alcohol, and high body fat values were also associated with higher values of the two phenotypes. The association of the Insulin Resistance Phenotype with the Vascular Risk Phenotype suggests common pathophysiological mechanisms present in early events in the continuums of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in adolescence.

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