학술논문

Impaired fasting glucose prevalence surge among Iranian adolescents in a decade: The Tehran Lipid and Glucose Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pediatric Diabetes. Dec2019, Vol. 20 Issue 8, p1064-1071. 8p. 2 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*OBESITY risk factors
*BLOOD pressure
*BLOOD sugar
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*FASTING
*HIGH density lipoproteins
*LIPIDS
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*OBESITY
*RISK management in business
*TRIGLYCERIDES
*MULTIPLE regression analysis
*DISEASE prevalence
*ODDS ratio
Language
ISSN
1399-543X
Abstract
Purpose: Impaired fasting glucose (IFG) is associated with incident diabetes, cardiovascular risk, and markers of atherosclerosis in early adulthood. We aimed to explore the 10‐year change in IFG prevalence among adolescent participants of the Tehran Lipid and Glucose Study, a population‐based study from Iran. Methods: For our study, we used data on fasting plasma glucose (FPG), anthropometric, and demographic information of 11 to 19‐year‐old adolescents in study periods I (1999‐2005; 1415 boys, 1583 girls) and II (2011‐2014; 477 boys, 469 girls). Sex‐adjusted and sex‐stratified multivariable logistic regression models were used to assess the relationship of the study period (reference: study period I) with IFG. Results: The prevalence of IFG, general obesity, and central obesity increased from 7%, 13.3%, and 18.8% in study period I to 16.6%, 24%, and 37.4% in study period II; while a favorable trend was seen for blood pressure, triglycerides, and high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol. In the fully adjusted model, being older (age group 15‐19 vs 11‐14 years) and female sex were associated with lower risk. Being overweight and obese increased the risk by risk ratios (confidence interval) of 1.57 (1.17‐2.11) and 1.63 (1.15‐2.30), respectively. Central adiposity did not remain as an independent risk factor. Nevertheless, study period persisted as a significant factor despite all adjustments [2.20 (1.81‐2.68)]. Results in the sex‐stratified models were generally the same. Conclusion: Our results demonstrated that the over 2‐fold rise in IFG prevalence among adolescents was not solely dependent on general and central obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]