1. Serum testosterone, sex hormone-binding globulin and sex-specific risk of incident type 2 diabetes in a retrospective primary care cohort
- Author
-
O'Reilly, MW, Glisic, Marija, Kumarendran, B, Subramanian, A, Manolopoulos, KN, Tahrani, AA, Keerthy, D, Muka, Taulant, Toulis, KA, Hanif, W, Thomas, GN, Franco Duran, OH, Arlt, W, Nirantharakumar, K, and Epidemiology
- Subjects
SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,360 Social problems & social services ,610 Medicine & health - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Previous studies suggest that androgens have a sexually dimorphic impact on metabolic dysfunction. However, the sex-specific link between circulating androgens and risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) has not been examined in a large scale, longitudinal cohort, a task we undertook in this study. DESIGN A retrospective cohort study in a UK primary care database. PATIENTS We included men and women with available serum testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) results. MEASUREMENTS We categorized serum concentrations according to clinically relevant cut-off points and calculated crude and adjusted T2DM Incidence Rate Ratios (IRRs and aIRRs). RESULTS Serum testosterone concentrations were available in 70,541 men and 81,889 women; serum SHBG was available in 15,907 men and 42,034 women. In comparison to a reference cohort with serum testosterone ≥20nmol/l, men with lower serum testosterone had a significantly increased risk of T2DM, with the highest risk in those with serum testosterone
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF