A study involving more than 8,000 participants has shown that people with a family history of diabetes see their risk of prediabetes increase by 26 per cent. The research is published in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, and is by Dr Andreas Fritsche and colleagues from the German Center for Diabetes Research.
Prediabetes is a condition most often described as the ‘state between normal blood sugar control and full diabetes’, and indeed prediabetes progresses to full blown diabetes in up to 20 per cent of individuals affected per year. Prediabetes can take two forms: impaired fasting glycaemia (IFG), whereby levels of glucose in the fast state are higher than normal but not high enough to be classed as diabetes; and also impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), where blood sugar levels are abnormal due to increased insulin resistance. While it is known that a family history of type 2 diabetes increases the risk of full blown diabetes, research has not yet explored whether such a family history increases the risk of prediabetes in either form.
In this study Fritsche and colleagues analysed 8,106 non-diabetic individuals of European origin collected from the study centres of the German Center for Diabetes Research. Of these, 5,482 had normal glucose tolerance, and 2,624 had IFG and/or IGT n=2,624. They analysed whether having at least one first degree relative with diabetes is associated with prediabetes.
A family history of diabetes was found to increase the crude, unadjusted risk for prediabetes (IFG and/or IGT) by 40 per cent. This increased risk fell to 26 per cent when the analysis took account of age, sex, and BMI of participants. When different types of prediabetes were considered, family history increased the risk of isolated IFG by 37 per cent, of isolated IGT by 25 per cent, and the two combined by 64 per cent. However overall, when adjusted for BMI, the association between family history and prediabetes was seen only in non-obese individuals (BMI<30 kg/m2). The authors say: “Our data suggest that a family history of diabetes is associated with prediabetes in non-obese rather than in obese individuals. This might indicate the effect of family history on prediabetes becomes readily measurable only when not overshadowed by strong risk factors such as obesity.”
They conclude, “We found that family history is an important risk factor for prediabetes, especially for combined IGT and IFG. Its relevance seems to be more evident in the non-obese.”
EP News Bureau – Mumbai