In:
Diabetes Care, American Diabetes Association, Vol. 34, No. 1 ( 2011-01-01), p. 121-125
Kurzfassung:
To test if knowledge of type 2 diabetes genetic variants improves disease prediction. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We tested 40 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with diabetes in 3,471 Framingham Offspring Study subjects followed over 34 years using pooled logistic regression models stratified by age ( & lt;50 years, diabetes cases = 144; or ≥50 years, diabetes cases = 302). Models included clinical risk factors and a 40-SNP weighted genetic risk score. RESULTS In people & lt;50 years of age, the clinical risk factors model C-statistic was 0.908; the 40-SNP score increased it to 0.911 (P = 0.3; net reclassification improvement (NRI): 10.2%, P = 0.001). In people ≥50 years of age, the C-statistics without and with the score were 0.883 and 0.884 (P = 0.2; NRI: 0.4%). The risk per risk allele was higher in people & lt;50 than ≥50 years of age (24 vs. 11%; P value for age interaction = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Knowledge of common genetic variation appropriately reclassifies younger people for type 2 diabetes risk beyond clinical risk factors but not older people.
Materialart:
Online-Ressource
ISSN:
0149-5992
,
1935-5548
Sprache:
Englisch
Verlag:
American Diabetes Association
Publikationsdatum:
2011
ZDB Id:
1490520-6