4.3 Article

Glucocorticoids associate with cardiometabolic risk factors in black South Africans

Journal

ENDOCRINE CONNECTIONS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages 873-884

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/EC-21-0195

Keywords

glucocorticoids; metabolic syndrome; cardiometabolic risk factors; cortisol; corticosterone

Funding

  1. Academy of Medical Sciences Newton Advanced Fellowship
  2. South African National Research Foundation (NRF)
  3. South African National Department of Health
  4. UKMRC
  5. Newton Fund
  6. GSK
  7. British Heart Foundation
  8. Wellcome Trust
  9. NRF

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This study found that circulating glucocorticoid concentrations are associated with metabolic syndrome and cardiometabolic risk factors in Africans, exhibiting both glucocorticoid- and sex-specificity.
Circulating glucocorticoids are associated with metabolic syndrome and related cardiometabolic risk factors in non-Africans. This study investigated these associations in Africans, whose metabolic phenotype reportedly differs from Europeans. Adiposity, blood pressure, glycaemia, insulin resistance, and lipid profile, were measured in 316 African men and 788 African women living in Soweto, Johannesburg. The 2009 harmonized criteria were used to define metabolic syndrome. Serum glucocorticoids were measured using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Cortisol was associated with greater odds presenting with metabolic syndrome (odds ratio (95% CI) =1.50 (1.04, 2.17) and higher systolic (beta coefficient, beta (95% CI) =0.04 (0.01, 0.08)) and diastolic (0.05 (0.02, 0.09)) blood pressure, but higher HDL (0.10 (0.02, 0.19)) and lower LDL (-0.14 (-0.24, -0.03)) cholesterol concentrations, in the combined sample of men and women. In contrast, corticosterone was only associated with higher insulin sensitivity (Matsuda index; 0.22 (0.03, 0.41)), but this was not independent of BMI. Sex-specific associations were observed, such that both cortisol and corticosterone were associated with higher fasting glucose (standardized beta (95% CI): 0.24 (0.12, 0.36) for cortisol and 0.12 (0.01, 0.23) for corticosterone) and HbA1c (0.13 (0.01, 0.25) for cortisol and 0.12 (0.01, 0.24) for corticosterone) in men only, but lower HbA1c (0.10 (-0.20, -0.01) for cortisol and -0.09 (-0.18, -0.03) for corticosterone) in women only. Our study reports for the first time that associations between circulating glucocorticoid concentrations and key cardiometabolic risk factors exhibit both glucocorticoid- and sex-specificity in Africans.

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