101. Trajectory of body mass index before the development of type 2 diabetes in Japanese men: Toranomon Hospital Health Management Center Study 15
- Author
-
Kazumi Saito, Yasuji Arase, Yoriko Heianza, Hiroshi Tsuji, Satoru Kodama, Shigeko Hara, Shiro Tanaka, and Hirohito Sone
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Type2 diabetes ,Disease ,Type 2 diabetes ,Overweight ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Body mass index trajectory ,Glycemic ,business.industry ,Articles ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Natural history ,chemistry ,Glycated hemoglobin ,medicine.symptom ,Prediction ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Aims/Introduction: We aimed to investigate the long-term trajectory of general adiposity assessed by the body mass index (BMI) before the onset of type2 diabetes in Japanese individuals. Materials and Methods: We retrospectively examined data on 1, 553 Japanese men without diabetes. Mean BMI and incident cases of diabetes (diabetes indicated by fasting glucose concentrations ≥7.0mmol/L, a self-reported history of clinician-diagnosed diabetes, or glycated hemoglobin ≥6.5% (≥48mmol/mol) were assessed on an annual basis over a 10-year period after the baseline examination. Results: Mean (standard deviation) BMI at the time of diagnosis was 24.4kg/m2 (3.1kg/m2) among cases of diabetes (n=191). An increasingly high BMI was associated with the early stage of the disease development, such as an 8- to 10-year prediagnosis period; individuals who developed diabetes experienced a prolonged and stable elevated BMI of ≥24.4kg/m2 over the 8years before the diagnosis of diabetes. The mean BMI among the non-cases of diabetes did not exceed 23.2kg/m2 throughout the period. Conclusions: These results suggested that Japanese men who eventually developed diabetes during the 10-year observation period were not characterized as obese, but had stable high-normal BMIs before the onset of diabetes. Previous evidence showed that values for glycemic markers rapidly increased before the development of diabetes; however, the present study showed a slight gain in BMI in the earlier stage of the natural history of diabetes followed by a prolonged period of overweight.
- Published
- 2015