| Literature DB >> 14992698 |
Jeffrey W Stephens1, Steven J Hurel, Jayshree Acharya, Steve E Humphries.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Microalbuminuria and subsequent progression to proteinuria and nephropathy is associated with increased oxidative stress, increased inflammatory cytokines and increased cardiovascular (CVD) risk. The common functional IL-6 -174G>C gene variant is also associated with elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines and CVD risk.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 14992698 PMCID: PMC375540 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2840-3-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Diabetol ISSN: 1475-2840 Impact factor: 9.951
Baseline differences in subjects by CVD status
| Trait | No CVD (n = 364) | CVD (n = 188) | P Value |
| Age (years) | 65.5 (11.3) | 69.6 (9.6) | <0.001 |
| Duration (years)+ | 8 (4–15) | 10 (5.5–17) | 0.008 |
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg)* | 141 (128–153) | 139 (129–154) | 0.340 |
| Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg)* | 81 (74–87) | 76 (71–83) | 0.004 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2)* | 29.17 (26.23–32.58) | 29.08 (26.13–31.97) | 0.262 |
| HbA1c (%)* | 7.6 (6.6–8.9) | 7.4 (6.5–8.7) | 0.336 |
| Creatinine (mmol/l)* | 88 (76–103) | 99 (84–122) | <0.001 |
| CRP (mg/l)*; | 1.73 (1.06–3.18) | 1.80 (0.99–3.34) | 0.578 |
| TAOS | 42.50 (13.01) | 41.83 (13.61) | 0.578 |
| Sex (F/M) | 165/199 (45.3/54.7%) | 57/131 (30.5/69.5%) | 0.001 |
| Normo/micro/proteinuria | 201/128/35 (55.2/35.3/9.5%) | 83/75/30 (44.1/39.9/16.0%) | 0.019 |
| Genotype distribution | 155/165/44 (42.6/45.3/12.1%) | 80/85/23 (42.6/45.2/12.2%) | 0.999 |
| ACEI (No/Yes) | 197/167 (54.0/46.0%) | 79/109 (42/58%) | 0.008 |
| Aspirin (No/Yes) | 215/149 (59.2/40.8%) | 50/138 (26.7/73.3%) | <0.001 |
| Insulin (No/Yes) | 280/84 (76.8/23.2%) | 130/58 (69.1/30.9%) | 0.052 |
| Statin (No/Yes) | 289/75 (79.3/20.7%) | 85/103 (45.2/54.8%) | <0.001 |
Mean (SD) or Median (Interquartile range) shown, *Log transformed, +Square root transformed. Analysis performed by two-sided T-tests after appropriate transformation. χ2 test were used to compare groups.
Figure 1Plasma TAOS by genotype and urinary protein excretion in subjects free from CVD. Footnote: Mean (± standard error) shown. Numbers of subjects are shown at the base of each column. In those without CVD, the interaction between genotype (GG v GC/CC) and urinary protein excretion in determining plasma TAOS was significant (p = 0.032). *In the GC/CC subjects, there was a significant difference in plasma TAOS by urinary protein excretion (normoalbuminuria/ microalbuminuria/proteinuria), ANOVA between groups p = 0.025 (as expected the linear association in TAOS between these groups was significant p = 0.008 with normoalbuminuric subjects having the highest TAOS and those with proteinuria the lowest). In GG Subjects no such difference was observed, (ANOVA between groups, p = 0.399)
Genotype distribution by CVD status and urinary protein excretion
| -174G>C genotype | No CVD | CVD | ||||
| Normoalbumiuria | Microalbuminuria | Proteinuria | Normoalbumiuria | Microalbuminuria | Proteinuria | |
| GG | 91 (25.0%) | 50 (13.7%) | 14 (3.8%) | 35 (18.6%) | 31 (16.5%) | 14 (7.4%) |
| GC | 89 (24.5%) | 58 (15.9%) | 18 (4.9%) | 41 (21.8%) | 33 (17.6%) | 11 (5.9%) |
| CC | 21 (5.8%) | 20 (5.5%) | 3 (0.8%) | 7 (3.7%) | 11 (5.9%) | 5 (2.7%) |
| C allele frequency | 0.326 (0.28–0.37) | 0.383 (0.32–0.44) | 0.343 (0.23–0.45) | 0.331 (0.26–0.40) | 0.367 (0.29–0.44) | 0.350 (0.23–0.47) |
The percentage in brackets is the percentage of the subject in each cell with respect to CVD/No CVD. The -174C allele frequency is shown with the 95% confidence interval in brackets.