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Utility of genetic and non-genetic risk factors in prediction of type 2 diabetes:
Whitehall II prospective cohort study.
OBJECTIVES: To assess the performance of a panel of common single nucleotide
polymorphisms (genotypes) associated with type 2 diabetes in distinguishing
incident cases of future type 2 diabetes (discrimination), and to examine the
effect of adding genetic information to previously validated non-genetic
(phenotype based) models developed to estimate the absolute risk of type 2
diabetes. DESIGN: Workplace based prospective cohort study with three 5 yearly
medical screenings. PARTICIPANTS: 5535 initially healthy people (mean age 49
years; 33% women), of whom 302 developed new onset type 2 diabetes over 10 years.
OUTCOME MEASURES: Non-genetic variables included in two established risk
models-the Cambridge type 2 diabetes risk score (age, sex, drug treatment, family
history of type 2 diabetes, body mass index, smoking status) and the Framingham
offspring study type 2 diabetes risk score (age, sex, parental history of type 2
diabetes, body mass index, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides,
fasting glucose)-and 20 single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with
susceptibility to type 2 diabetes. Cases of incident type 2 diabetes were defined
on the basis of a standard oral glucose tolerance test, self report of a doctor s
diagnosis, or the use of anti-diabetic drugs. RESULTS: A genetic score based on
the number of risk alleles carried (range 0-40; area under receiver operating
characteristics curve 0.54, 95% confidence interval 0.50 to 0.58) and a genetic
risk function in which carriage of risk alleles was weighted according to the
summary odds ratios of their effect from meta-analyses of genetic studies (area
under receiver operating characteristics curve 0.55, 0.51 to 0.59) did not
effectively discriminate cases of diabetes. The Cambridge risk score (area under
curve 0.72, 0.69 to 0.76) and the Framingham offspring risk score (area under
curve 0.78, 0.75 to 0.82) led to better discrimination of cases than did genotype
based tests. Adding genetic information to phenotype based risk models did not
improve discrimination and provided only a small improvement in model calibration
and a modest net reclassification improvement of about 5% when added to the
Cambridge risk score but not when added to the Framingham offspring risk score.
CONCLUSION: The phenotype based risk models provided greater discrimination for
type 2 diabetes than did models based on 20 common independently inherited
diabetes risk alleles. The addition of genotypes to phenotype based risk models
produced only minimal improvement in accuracy of risk estimation assessed by
recalibration and, at best, a minor net reclassification improvement. The major
translational application of the currently known common, small effect genetic
variants influencing susceptibility to type 2 diabetes is likely to come from the
insight they provide on causes of disease and potential therapeutic targets.
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Autoren:
Talmud, Philippa J
; Hingorani, Aroon D
; Cooper, Jackie A
; Marmot, Michael G
; Brunner, Eric J
; Kumari, Meena
; Kivimaki, Mika
; Humphries, Steve E
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Quelle:
BMJ. 2010 Jan 14;340:b4838. doi: 10.1136/bmj.b4838.
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| Literaturrecherche: U.S.National Library of Medicine's PubMed®
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