Aims: We examined associations between lipoprotein subfractions and prevalent and incident T2D in two race/ethnically diverse cohort studies.
Methods: Adults self-identifying as White, Black, Chinese, Hispanic and South Asian-American without cardiovascular disease, with fasting serum, demographic, and clinical data at enrollment and after 5 years of follow-up were included. Lipoprotein subfractions were measured at enrollment using NMR spectrometry. LASSO regularized logistic regression models adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, lipid-lowering agent use, and waist circumference assessed odds of incident T2D in pooled analyses.
Results: There were 4474 participants with lipoprotein subfraction data at enrollment and 3839 participants without prevalent diabetes, mean age 62 years, 51 % women, with 234 incident T2D cases at 5 years. Triglycerides in small, dense LDL-5 [OR 1.26 (95 % CI 1.11,1.43)], VLDL triglycerides 1.30** [1.16,1.46] and phospholipids in VLDL-1 [OR 1.31 (1.17,1.47)] were associated with higher odds of incident T2D, while free cholesterol in large HDL-1 [OR 0.75 (95 % CI 0.63,0.89)] was inversely associated. The results were similar for prevalent diabetes and did not vary by race/ethnic group.
Conclusions: Composition of lipoprotein subfractions is differentially associated with prevalent and incident T2D without difference by race/ethnic group. Assessment of lipoprotein composition may enhance targeted risk reduction for T2D.
Keywords: Disparities; Lipidomics; South Asian; Type 2 diabetes.
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.