| Literature DB >> 23967108 |
Wen-Chi Pan1, Molly L Kile, Wei Jie Seow, Xihong Lin, Quazi Quamruzzaman, Mahmuder Rahman, Golam Mahiuddin, Golam Mostofa, Quan Lu, David C Christiani.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic exposure to arsenic in drinking water is associated with increased risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) but the underlying molecular mechanism remains unclear.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23967108 PMCID: PMC3743824 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Distribution of Demographic, Lifestyle, and Arsenic Exposure Variables by Diabetes Status (n = 919) in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 2001–2003 (Baseline).
| Diabetes [n(%)] | ||||
| Variable | No (n = 836) | Yes (n = 83) | p-value | |
| Age, years | Mean (SD) | 33.46 (11.7) | 39.8 (10.8) | <0.001 |
| Median (IQR) | 33.0 (18.0) | 40.0 (14.0) | ||
| Sex | Male | 505 (60.4) | 53 (63.9) | 0.558 |
| Female | 331 (39.6) | 30 (36.1) | ||
| Marital status | Single | 222 (26.6) | 9 (10.8) | 0.003 |
| Married | 598 (71.5) | 71 (85.5) | ||
| Widowed or divorced | 16 (1.9) | 3 (3.6) | ||
| Education attainment, year | 0–6 | 487 (58.3) | 50 (60.2) | 0.888 |
| 7–12 | 319 (38.2) | 30 (36.1) | ||
| >12 | 29 (3.5) | 3 (3.6) | ||
| BMI, kg/m2 | <24.9 | 728 (93.5) | 59 (71.1) | <0.001 |
| ≧25.0 | 54 (6.4) | 24 (28.9) | ||
| Cigarette smoking (among male only) | Never | 599 (71.9) | 48 (57.8) | 0.004 |
| Past or current | 234 (28.1) | 35 (42.1) | ||
| Skin lesion | Yes | 480 (57.4) | 43 (51.8) | 0.353 |
| No | 356 (42.6) | 40 (48.2) | ||
| Arsenic in drinking water in baseline (2001–2003), μg/L | Mean (SD) | 141.9 (249.6) | 207.2 (279.0) | <0.001 |
| Median (IQR) | 12.5 (125.5) | 71.6 (269.8) | ||
SD and IQR denoted standard deviation and interquartile range, respectively.
P-values from Fisher's exact test for sex, marital status, education attainment, BMI, cigarette smoking, and skin lesion; or from Wilcoxon rank sum test with continuity correction for age, and arsenic in drinking water. 1 participant was missing for education and 8 participants were missing for smoking status.
Associations between SNPs and risks of type 2 diabetes in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 2001–2011.
| Marker | Gene | Adjusted Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | p-value | q-value |
| rs17070905 | ADAMTS9 | 2.30 | 1.17–4.50 | 0.015 | 0.247 |
| rs17070967 | ADAMTS9 | 2.02 | 1.00–4.06 | 0.049 | 0.408 |
| rs6766801 | ADAMTS9 | 2.33 | 1.18–4.60 | 0.015 | 0.247 |
Models were adjusted for age, sex, BMI, smoking, skin lesion, and arsenic in drinking water using penalized splines.
P-value for overall effects of three markers in ADAMST9 was 0.006 (q-value = 0.066) using kernel machine regression adjusting for age, sex, BMI, smoking, skin lesion, and arsenic in drinking water.
Interaction between SNPs and arsenic in drinking water on risk of type 2 diabetes in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 2001–2011.
| Marker | Gene | p-value for interaction | q-value |
| rs1051055 | CDC123 | 0.008 | 0.033 |
| rs699780 | NOTCH2 | 0.003 | 0.021 |
| rs2688 | TCF2 | 0.003 | 0.021 |
Models were adjusted for age, sex, BMI, smoking, skin lesion, SNPs and arsenic in drinking water using piece-wise regression models.
Q-values were calculated using FDR method for p for interaction among whole population.
P for interactions were 0.613 for rs1051055 (CDC123), 0.048 for rs699780 (NOTCH2), and 0.219 for rs2688 (TCF2) among people exposed to water arsenic less than 148 μg/L.
Figure 1Exposure-response relationship between arsenic in drinking water and diabetes by NOTCH2 in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 2001–2011.
Restricted analyses were performed among people exposed to water arsenic below 148 μg/L adjusting for age, sex, BMI, smoking, skin lesion, and arsenic in drinking water using cubic polynomial models. P for interaction was 0.012. Sample sizes were 316 for TT carriers and 325 for TC/CC carriers of rs699780. The solid line indicated the estimated odds ratio using lowest exposure levels of water arsenic as the reference. Water arsenic was natural logarithm- transformed.