South Asians are at higher risk for diabetes (DM) than many other racial/ethnic groups. Circulating metabolites are measurable products of metabolic processes that may explain the etiology of elevated risk.… Click to show full abstract
South Asians are at higher risk for diabetes (DM) than many other racial/ethnic groups. Circulating metabolites are measurable products of metabolic processes that may explain the etiology of elevated risk. We characterized metabolites associated with prevalent DM and incident glycemic measures in South Asians. We included 717 participants in the Mediators of Atherosclerosis in South Asians Living in America (MASALA) study, aged 40-84 years. We used baseline fasting serum for metabolomics and demographic, behavioral, glycemic data from baseline and at 5 years. We performed LC-MS untargeted metabolomic and lipidomic analysis with targeted integration of known signals. Individual linear and ordinal logistic regression models were adjusted for age, sex, BMI, diet, exercise, alcohol, smoking and family history of DM followed by elastic net regression to identify metabolites most contributory to the outcome. There were 258 metabolites with detectable signal in >98% of samples. Fifty-nine metabolites were associated with prevalent DM, 32 with fasting glucose and 45 with HbA1c at follow-up [FDR Disclosure M.D. Gadgil: None. C. Sands: None. M.R. Lewis: None. A.M. Kanaya: None. N.R. Kandula: None. D.M. Herrington: None. Funding National Institutes of Health (1K23DK119404-01A1)
               
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