Original Contributions |
From the Honolulu Epidemiology Research Unit, Epidemiology and Biometry Program, Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Honolulu, HI (C.M.B., D.S.S.); the Honolulu Heart Program, Kuakini Medical Center (J.D.C., B.L.R., K.Y.); and Department of Medicine, the John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI (J.D.C., B.L.R., R.A.); and the Division of Biostatistics, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville (R.D.A.).
AbstractHyperinsulinemia
has been associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD),
but whether this relation is independent of other CVD risk factors is
uncertain. Most studies have focused on coronary heart disease
(CHD), but few have included peripheral vascular disease
(PVD) and stroke. Moreover, evidence in elderly and minority
populations is limited. Between 1991 and 1993, 3562 elderly (71 to 93
years) Japanese-American men from the Honolulu Heart Program were
examined and had fasting insulin levels measured.
Hyperinsulinemia, defined as a fasting insulin
95th percentile among nonobese men with normal glucose tolerance and
no diabetic history or medication use, was observed in 22% of the
population. Subjects with hyperinsulinemia had a
more adverse CVD risk factor profile and had higher age-adjusted
prevalences of CHD, angina, PVD, thromboembolic stroke, and hemorrhagic
stroke compared with those without
hyperinsulinemia. Age-adjusted fasting insulin
levels but not 2-hour levels were also significantly elevated
(P<.01) in those with prevalent CVD compared with
those without. In logistic regression analyses, adjustment for
multiple CVD risk factors attenuated the relations of
hyperinsulinemia with CHD, angina, and PVD to
nonsignificant levels, whereas those involving thromboembolic and
hemorrhagic stroke were strengthened and remained significant (odds
ratios=2.27 and 7.53, 95% confidence intervals=1.25 to 4.13 and 1.65
to 34.25, respectively). When multivariate
analyses were restricted to nondiabetic subjects, associations
were slightly weaker and in general nonsignificant. Nondiabetic men
with thromboembolic stroke were twice as likely to have
hyperinsulinemia as those who were stroke-free,
although this association was of borderline significance (odds
ratio=1.99, 95% confidence interval=0.95 to 4.17,
P=.069). In subjects with elevated total
cholesterol levels, somewhat stronger associations were
observed for PVD and stroke but not for CHD. Although further
prospective studies are indicated, particularly for PVD and stroke,
these cross-sectional results are consistent with an indirect
role for insulin in CVD, wherein hyperinsulinemia
or an underlying insulin-resistant state may adversely affect
other CVD risk factors or serve as a marker for an atherogenic or
thrombogenic state.
Key Words: Asian Americans cardiovascular diseases insulin
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