100万瑞典男性青少年心肺健康和成年后期2型糖尿病风险:全国同胞对照队列研究

IF 10
BMJ medicine Pub Date : 2025-08-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1136/bmjmed-2024-001313
Marcel Ballin, Viktor H Ahlqvist, Daniel Berglind, Mattias Brunström, Angel Herraiz-Adillo, Pontus Henriksson, Martin Neovius, Francisco B Ortega, Anna Nordström, Peter Nordström
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:探讨青少年心肺健康与成年后期2型糖尿病风险之间的关系,包括未观察到的家族混杂因素对这种关系的潜在影响。设计:全国同胞对照队列研究。背景:1972年至1995年,瑞典兵役征召登记簿(Swedish Military Service征兵登记簿)和多代登记簿(Multi-Generation Register),用于识别全兄妹。国家患者登记册和处方药登记册中的2型糖尿病诊断数据,国家死因登记册中的死亡数据,以及瑞典统计局的移民和社会经济数据。参与者:1 124 049名参加强制性征兵考试并完成标准化心肺功能测试的瑞典男性。参与者被随访至2023年12月31日。主要结局指标:2型糖尿病,定义为住院或专科门诊诊断和降糖药物治疗的复合终点,直至2023年12月31日。结果:纳入1 124 049名男性,包括477 453名全兄妹,基线时平均年龄为18.3岁(标准差0.7)。在随访期间,115 958名男性(10.3%)和48 089名全兄妹(10.1%)首次发生2型糖尿病事件,中位年龄为53.4岁(四分位数间距为47.6-59.3岁)。心肺健康被分为十分位数(称为组,第1组的健康水平最低,第10组的健康水平最高)。在队列分析中,健身组2与健身组1的校正风险比为0.83(95%可信区间(CI) 0.81至0.85),65岁时标准化累积发病率的差异为4.3 (95% CI 3.8至4.8)个百分点,风险比降至0.38(0.36至0.39;健身组发病率差异17.8(17.3 ~ 18.3)个百分点。当对全兄妹进行比较,从而控制所有未观察到的共同行为、环境和遗传混杂因素时,这种关联得到了复制,但程度有所降低。健身2组的危险比为0.89 (95% CI 0.85 ~ 0.94;发病率差2.3(1.3 ~ 3.3)个百分点)和0.53 (0.50 ~ 0.57);健身组发病率差异10.9(9.7 ~ 12.1)个百分点。假设将健身组1的所有参与者转移到健身组2,在队列分析中估计可以预防7.2% (95% CI 6.4%至8.0%)的65岁事件,而在全同胞分析中则为4.6%(2.6%至6.5%),而假设将所有参与者转移到健身组10估计可以预防35.6%(34.1%至37.0%)的事件,而24.3%(20.5至28.0)的事件。研究发现,超重状态改变了影响的迹象,超重人群的相关性小于没有超重的人群,特别是在全兄弟姐妹分析中。结论:研究结果表明,青少年心肺健康对成年后期2型糖尿病的发展可能很重要,但传统的观察性分析可能对影响的程度给出了有偏差的估计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cardiorespiratory fitness in adolescence and risk of type 2 diabetes in late adulthood in one million Swedish men: nationwide sibling controlled cohort study.

Objective: To examine the association between adolescent cardiorespiratory fitness and risk of type 2 diabetes in late adulthood, including the potential influence of unobserved familial confounding on the association.

Design: Nationwide sibling controlled cohort study.

Setting: Swedish Military Service Conscription Register, Sweden, 1972-95, with Multi-Generation Register for identifying full siblings. National Patient Register and Prescribed Drug Register for data on diagnoses of type 2 diabetes, deaths from National Cause of Death Register, and Statistics Sweden for emigration and socioeconomic data.

Participants: 1 124 049 Swedish men who participated in mandatory military conscription examinations with completed standardised cardiorespiratory fitness testing. Participants were followed up until 31 December 2023.

Main outcome measures: Type 2 diabetes, defined as a composite endpoint of diagnosis in inpatient or specialist outpatient care and dispensation of antidiabetic drug treatment, until 31 December 2023.

Results: 1 124 049 men, including 477 453 full siblings, with a mean age of 18.3 (standard deviation 0.7) years at baseline were included. During follow-up, 115 958 men (10.3%) and 48 089 full siblings (10.1%) had a first type 2 diabetes event at a median age of 53.4 (interquartile range 47.6-59.3) years. Cardiorespiratory fitness was categorised into deciles (referred to as groups, with group 1 being the lowest fitness level and group 10 the highest). In a cohort analysis, the adjusted hazard ratio in fitness group 2 versus fitness group 1 was 0.83 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.81 to 0.85), with a difference in the standardised cumulative incidence at age 65 years of 4.3 (95% CI 3.8 to 4.8) percentage points, decreasing to a hazard ratio of 0.38 (0.36 to 0.39; incidence difference 17.8 (17.3 to 18.3) percentage points) in fitness group 10. When comparing full siblings, and thus controlling for all unobserved shared behavioural, environmental, and genetic confounders, the association was replicated, but with a reduction in magnitude. The hazard ratio in fitness group 2 was 0.89 (95% CI 0.85 to 0.94; incidence difference 2.3 (1.3 to 3.3) percentage points) and 0.53 (0.50 to 0.57; incidence difference 10.9 (9.7 to 12.1) percentage points) in fitness group 10. Hypothetically moving all participants in fitness group 1 to fitness group 2 was estimated to prevent 7.2% (95% CI 6.4% to 8.0%) of events at age 65 years in the cohort analysis versus 4.6% (2.6% to 6.5%) in the full sibling analysis, whereas hypothetically moving all participants to fitness group 10 was estimated to prevent 35.6% (34.1% to 37.0%) versus 24.3% (20.5 to 28.0) of events. Indications of effect modification by overweight status were found, where the association was smaller in those with overweight than in those without overweight, particularly in the full sibling analysis.

Conclusions: The findings indicate that adolescent cardiorespiratory fitness could be important in the development of type 2 diabetes in late adulthood, but conventional observational analysis might give biased estimates of the magnitude of the effect.

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