Disease areas:
  • cancer and other tissue growths
  • heart and blood vessels
  • nutrition and metabolism
Last updated:
Author(s):
Mirthe Muilwijk, Frederick Ho, Heather Waddell, Anne Sillars, Paul Welsh, Stamatina Iliodromiti, Rosemary Brown, Lyn Ferguson, Karien Stronks, Irene van Valkengoed, Jill P Pell, Stuart Robert Gray, Jason Martin Regnald Gill, Naveed Sattar, Carlos Celis-Morales
Publish date:
17 December 2019
Journal:
BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care
PubMed ID:
31908795

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether the health implications of having type 2 diabetes (T2D) were different in South Asian compared with white European participants.

Research design and methods: Prospective data from UK Biobank were used, and 457 935 participants of white European and 7102 of South Asian background were included. Cox proportional regression was performed to investigate the association between T2D and health outcome by ethnicity.

Results: Over a mean of 7.0 years (IQR 6.3-7.6) of follow-up, 12 974 participants had died, and 30 347 and 27 159 developed cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer, respectively. South Asians had a higher risk for CVD mortality (HR: 1.42, 95% CI 1.07 to 1.89) and incidence (HR: 1.78, 95% CI 1.63 to 1.94), but a decreased risk for cancer mortality (HR: 0.59, 95% CI 0.41 to 0.85) and incidence (HR: 0.80, 95% CI 0.70 to 0.92) compared with white Europeans. Compared with individuals without T2D, both white Europeans and South Asians with T2D had a higher risk for all-cause mortality (1.59 (1.48 to 1.71) vs 2.83 (1.76 to 4.53)), CVD mortality (2.04 (1.82 to 2.28) vs 4.40 (2.37 to 8.16)) and CVD incidence (1.37 (1.31 to 1.44) vs 1.60 (1.31 to 1.95)), respectively. However, the magnitude of the risk was higher for South Asians than white Europeans.

Conclusions: Although T2D was associated with a higher risk for all-cause mortality and CVD incidence and mortality, in both white Europeans and South Asians, the risk experienced by South Asians with T2D was higher than their white European counterparts.

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Institution:
University of Glasgow, Great Britain

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