Publikation

Innate biology versus lifestyle behaviour in the aetiology of obesity and type 2 diabetes: the GLACIER Study

Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review - 01.12.2015

Bereiche
PubMed
DOI

Zitation
Poveda A, Koivula R, Ahmad S, Barroso I, Hallmans G, Johansson I, Renström F, Franks P. Innate biology versus lifestyle behaviour in the aetiology of obesity and type 2 diabetes: the GLACIER Study. Diabetologia 2015; 59:462-71.
Art
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review (Englisch)
Zeitschrift
Diabetologia 2015; 59
Veröffentlichungsdatum
01.12.2015
eISSN (Online)
1432-0428
Seiten
462-71
Kurzbeschreibung/Zielsetzung

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS
We compared the ability of genetic (established type 2 diabetes, fasting glucose, 2 h glucose and obesity variants) and modifiable lifestyle (diet, physical activity, smoking, alcohol and education) risk factors to predict incident type 2 diabetes and obesity in a population-based prospective cohort of 3,444 Swedish adults studied sequentially at baseline and 10 years later.

METHODS
Multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to assess the predictive ability of genetic and lifestyle risk factors on incident obesity and type 2 diabetes by calculating the AUC.

RESULTS
The predictive accuracy of lifestyle risk factors was similar to that yielded by genetic information for incident type 2 diabetes (AUC 75% and 74%, respectively) and obesity (AUC 68% and 73%, respectively) in models adjusted for age, age(2) and sex. The addition of genetic information to the lifestyle model significantly improved the prediction of type 2 diabetes (AUC 80%; p = 0.0003) and obesity (AUC 79%; p < 0.0001) and resulted in a net reclassification improvement of 58% for type 2 diabetes and 64% for obesity.

CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION
These findings illustrate that lifestyle and genetic information separately provide a similarly high degree of long-range predictive accuracy for obesity and type 2 diabetes.