| Literature DB >> 26044759 |
Arshad Mohamed Channanath1, Bassam Farran1, Kazem Behbehani1, Thangavel Alphonse Thanaraj1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Obesity contributes directly to the risk of diabetes and hypertension. Effective management of diabetes is essential to prevent or delay the onset of comorbid hypertension. In this study, we delineate the association body mass index (BMI) has with risk and age at onset of hypertension and explore how this association is modulated by sex and the pre-existing condition of diabetes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26044759 PMCID: PMC4466600 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Flow chart for the methodologies used to carve out data sets used in this study.
Descriptive statistics of the data sets used in the study
| Hypertension in patients with T2DM (n=3904) | Hypertension in patients without diabetes (n=1403) | p Value* | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age at the time of registration | 47.48±10.92 | 43.24±10.74 | <0.001 |
| Mean blood pressure values in mm Hg at registration | SP=122.05±9.07 | SP=120.98±10.12 | <0.001 |
| Mean BMI in kg/m2 | 32.58±6.16 | 33.11±6.66 | 0.11 |
| Mean blood pressure values in mm Hg at onset of hypertension | SP=141.11±21.48 | SP=145.89±19.76 | <0.001 |
| Mean HbA1C values in % | 8.68±1.90 | 5.9±0.47 | <0.001 |
| Mean duration of T2DM before onset of Hypertension in years | 2.85±1.94 | NA | |
| Mean duration of registration before the onset of hypertension in years | 8.81±6.19 | 4.52±2.58 | |
| Sex distribution | |||
| Men | 41.0% (n=1599) | 42.6% (n=597) | 0.51 |
| Women | 59.0% (n=2305) | 57.4% (n=806) | 0.59 |
| BMI distribution | |||
| Normal weight | 7.9% (n=307) | 8.3% (n=117) | 0.56 |
| Overweight | 29.6% (n=1157) | 28.2% (n=396) | 0.55 |
| Class I obesity | 30.5% (n=1191) | 28.4% (n=398) | 0.21 |
| Class II obesity | 18.9% (n=738) | 20.2% (n=284) | 0.35 |
| Class III obesity | 13.1% (n=511) | 14.8% (n=208) | 0.19 |
*The mean values presented in the previous two columns are compared using t test.
BMI, body mass index; HbA1C, glycated haemoglobin; T2DM, type 2 diabetes.
Figure 2Forest plots to illustrate (A) differences in HRs for developing hypertension in individuals with diabetes versus those without diabetes, (B) sex differences in HRs for developing hypertension in individuals with diabetes, and (C) sex differences in HRs for developing hypertension in individuals without diabetes. HRs are calculated against the baseline characteristics of individuals without diabetes from the normal weight category.
Regression models, derived in this study, for hypertension onset age
| To examine | Data set | Regression model |
|---|---|---|
| Interaction term between diabetes status and BMI | Pooled data—both the data sets are pooled together (N=5307) | Ŷ=60.49−0.36 (× BMI)−2.94 (× sex=male)−0.12 (BMI×diabetes status=yes)+12.73 (× diabetes status=yes) |
| Interaction term between sex and BMI | Pooled data—both the data sets are pooled together (N=5307) | Ŷ=65.70−0.33 (× BMI)−9.0 (× sex=male)−0.37 (BMI×sex=male) |
| Association of BMI with age at onset of hypertension in patients with diabetes | Data set of hypertension in patients with diabetes (N=3904) | Ŷ=70.13−[(0.39×(BMI)]−[(0.27×sex=male)×(BMI)]+[5.6×(sex=male)] |
| Association of BMI with age at onset of hypertension in patients without diabetes | Data set of hypertension in patients without diabetes (N=1403) | Ŷ=54.34−[0.18×(BMI)]−[(0.44×sex=male)×(BMI)]+[11.72×(sex=male)] |
| Confounding due to antidiabetic medication | Data set of hypertension in patients with diabetes(N=3904) | Ŷ=70.28−[0.39×(BMI)]−[(0.27×sex=male)×(BMI)]+[5.6×(Sex=male)]−[0.39 (× medication status=yes)] |
| Association of BMI with age at onset of hypertension in participants destined to develop diabetes | Data set of diabetes onset after that of hypertension | Ŷ=61.64−[−0.32× (BMI)]−[(0.36×Sex=male)×(BMI)]+[9.13×(sex=male)]. |
BMI, body mass index.
Change in the observed mean age at onset of hypertension (in years) for patients with overweight and obese diabetes as compared with that of patients with normal weight diabetes
| BMI categories of patients | Overweight | Class I obesity | Class II obesity | Class III obesity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) Both men and women (corrected for sex) | ||||
| Normal weight | −3.29 years | −6.2 years | −7.7 years | −10.1 years |
| (B) Men | ||||
| Normal weight | −3.5 years | −7.6 years | −10.8 years | −13.2 years |
| (C) Women | ||||
| Normal weight | −3.2 years | −5.7 years | −7.19 years | −9.7 years |
Changes in the observed mean age at onset of hypertension (in years) for overweight and obese patients with diabetes as compared with that of normal weight patients without diabetes
| BMI categories of patients | Overweight | Class I obesity | Class II obesity | Class III obesity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) Both men and women (corrected for sex) | ||||
| Normal weight | −3.0 years* | −3.3 years | −4.1 years | −7.8 years |
| (B) Men | ||||
| Normal weight | −5.8 years | −6.9 years | −10.1 years | −15.2 years |
| (C) Women | ||||
| Normal weight | −0.3 years* | −0.6 years* | −0.7 years* | −2.9 years* |
*These values are not significant. p Value >0.05.