BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care (Mar 2024)

Postprandial glucose variability and clusters of sex hormones, liver enzymes, and cardiometabolic factors in a South African cohort of African ancestry

  • Lisa K Micklesfield,
  • Tinashe Chikowore,
  • Julia H Goedecke,
  • Michèle Ramsay,
  • Bontle Masango,
  • Karl-Heinz Storbeck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjdrc-2023-003927
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2

Abstract

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Introduction This study aimed to, first, determine the clusters of sex hormones, liver enzymes, and cardiometabolic factors associated with postprandial glucose (PPG) and, second to evaluate the variation these clusters account for jointly and independently with polygenic risk scores (PRSs) in South Africans of African ancestry men and women.Research design and methods PPG was calculated as the integrated area under the curve for glucose during the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) using the trapezoidal rule in 794 participants from the Middle-aged Soweto Cohort. Principal component analysis was used to cluster sex hormones, liver enzymes, and cardiometabolic factors, stratified by sex. Multivariable linear regression was used to assess the proportion of variance in PPG accounted for by principal components (PCs) and type 2 diabetes (T2D) PRS while adjusting for selected covariates in men and women.Results The T2D PRS did not contribute to the PPG variability in both men and women. In men, the PCs’ cluster of sex hormones, liver enzymes, and cardiometabolic explained 10.6% of the variance in PPG, with PC1 (peripheral fat), PC2 (liver enzymes and steroid hormones), and PC3 (lipids and peripheral fat) contributing significantly to PPG. In women, PC factors of sex hormones, cardiometabolic factors, and liver enzymes explained a similar amount of the variance in PPG (10.8%), with PC1 (central fat) and PC2 (lipids and liver enzymes) contributing significantly to PPG.Conclusions We demonstrated that inter-individual differences in PPG responses to an OGTT may be differentially explained by body fat distribution, serum lipids, liver enzymes, and steroid hormones in men and women.