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The TG/HDL-C Ratio Does Not Predict Insulin Resistance in Overweight Women of African Descent; A Study of South African, African American and West African Women

机译:TG / HDL-C比不能预测非洲裔超重女性的胰岛素抵抗;南非,非裔美国人和西非妇女研究

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Women of African descent have a high prevalence of diseases caused by insulin resistance. To positively impact cardiometa-bolic health in Black women, effective screening tests for insulin resistance must be identified. Recently, the TC/HDL-C ratio has been recommended as a tool to predict insulin resistance in overweight people. While the ratio predicts insulin resistance in White women, it is ineffective in African American women. As there are no data for African women, we tested the ability of the TG/HDL-C ratio to predict insulin resistance in Black women from South Africa, West Africa and the United States. For comparison, the ratio was also tested in White women from South Africa. Participants were 801 women (157 Black South African, 382 African American, 119 West African, 143 White South African, age 36+-9y [mean+-SD]). Standardized scores were created from log-transformed homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance values from each population. Participants in the upper third of their population distribution were classified as insulin-resistant. To predict insulin resistance by the TG/HDL-C ratio, area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUC-ROC) curve was used and criteria were: 0.50 for no discrimination and >=0.70 for acceptable. Seventy-one percent of the Black women were overweight vs 51% of White women (P<.01). In overweight White women, AUC-ROC curve for prediction of insulin resistance by TG/HDL-C was 0.76+-0.06, but below the 0.70 threshold in each group of overweight Black women (Black South African: 0.64+-0.06, African American: 0.66+-0.03, and West African: 0.63+-0.07). Therefore, TG/HDL-C does not predict insulin resistance in overweight African American women and this investigation extends that finding to overweight Black South African and West African women. Resources to identify effective markers of insulin resistance are needed to improve cardiometabolic health in women of African descent.
机译:非洲人后裔妇女中胰岛素抵抗引起的疾病患病率很高。为了对黑人女性的心脏-心脏健康产生积极影响,必须确定有效的胰岛素抵抗筛查方法。最近,已建议将TC / HDL-C比用作预测超重人群胰岛素抵抗的工具。虽然该比例预测了白人女性的胰岛素抵抗,但在非洲裔美国女性中却无效。由于没有非洲女性的数据,我们测试了TG / HDL-C比预测南非,西非和美国黑人女性胰岛素抵抗的能力。为了进行比较,还对来自南非的白人妇女进行了测试。参加者为801名妇女(157名南非黑人,382名非裔美国人,119名西非人,143名白人南非人,年龄36 + -9y [平均值+ -SD])。从对数转换后的稳态模型评估-每个人群的胰岛素抵抗值创建标准化评分。人口分布中上三分之一的参与者被归类为胰岛素抵抗。为了通过TG / HDL-C比预测胰岛素抵抗,使用了受试者工作特征(AUC-ROC)曲线下方的面积,标准为:0.50(无歧视)和> = 0.70(可接受)。黑人妇女中有71%超重,白人妇女中有51%(P <.01)。在超重的白人女性中,通过TG / HDL-C预测胰岛素抵抗的AUC-ROC曲线为0.76 + -0.06,但在每组超重的黑人女性中均低于0.70阈值(南非黑人:0.64 + -0.06,非裔美国人:0.66 + -0.03,西非:0.63 + -0.07)。因此,TG / HDL-C不能预测超重的非洲裔美国妇女的胰岛素抵抗,这项研究将这一发现扩展到了超重的南非黑人和西非妇女。需要资源来识别胰岛素抵抗的有效标志物,以改善非洲人后裔的心脏代谢健康。

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