4.6 Article

Serum Retinal and Retinoic Acid Predict the Development of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Korean Subjects with Impaired Fasting Glucose from the KCPS-II Cohort

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo11080510

Keywords

type 2 diabetes mellitus; retinal; retinoic acid; biomarker; disease prediction; liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. Korea Healthcare Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea [HI14C2686010115, HI14C2686]
  2. Basic Science Research Program, Ministry of Education, through the National Research Foundation (NRF), Korea [NRF-2019R1I1A2A01061731]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study investigated the reliability of retinal and retinoic acid as biomarkers in predicting the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in subjects with impaired fasting glucose (IFG). The results showed significant decreases in these biomarkers in the IFG-DM group. When added to conventional risk factors for T2DM, these metabolites enhanced the predictive ability for T2DM.
We aimed to investigate whether retinal and retinoic acid (RA), which are newly discovered biomarkers from our previous research, reliably predict type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) development in subjects with impaired fasting glucose (IFG). Among the Korean Cancer Prevention Study (KCPS)-II cohort, subjects were selected and matched by age and sex (IFG-IFG group, n = 100 vs. IFG-DM group, n = 100) for study 1. For real-world validation of two biomarkers (study 2), other participants in the KCPS-II cohort who had IFG at baseline (n = 500) were selected. Targeted LC/MS was used to analyze the baseline serum samples; retinal and RA levels were quantified. In study 1, we revealed that both biomarkers were significantly decreased in the IFG-DM group (retinal, p = 0.017; RA, p < 0.001). The obese subjects in the IFG-DM group showed markedly lower retinal (p = 0.030) and RA (p = 0.003) levels than those in the IFG-IFG group. In study 2, the results for the two metabolites tended to be similar to those of study 1, but no significant difference was observed. Notably, the predictive ability for T2DM was enhanced when the metabolites were added to conventional risk factors for T2DM in both studies (study 1, AUC 0.682 -> 0.775; study 2, AUC 0.734 -> 0.786). The results suggest that retinal- and RA-related metabolic pathways are altered before the onset of T2DM.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available