Abstract

To test the hypothesis that an increased plasma concentration of sialic acid, a marker of the acute-phase response, is related to the presence of diabetic micro- and macrovascular complications in type 1 diabetes. We investigated the relationship between plasma sialic acid concentration and nephropathy, retinopathy, neuropathy, and coronary heart disease (CHD) in a cross-sectional survey of 1,369 people with type 1 diabetes. Subjects were participants in the EURODIAB IDDM Complications Study, which involved 31 centers in 16 European countries. There was a significantly increasing trend of plasma sialic acid with severity of retinopathy (P < 0.001 in men) and with degree of urinary albumin excretion (P < 0.001 men, P < 0.01 women). Plasma sialic acid correlated with increasing plasma creatinine concentration (P < 0.009 men, P < 0.0002 women), and men with neuropathy had a higher plasma sialic acid concentration than those without (P < 0.006). There was no significant correlation between plasma sialic acid and CHD in either sex. Elevated plasma sialic acid concentrations were also associated with several risk factors for diabetic vascular disease: diabetes duration, HbA1c, plasma triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations, waist-to-hip ratio, hypertension and smoking (in men), and low physical exercise (in women). In multiple logistic regression analysis, plasma sialic acid was independently related to proliferative retinopathy and urinary albumin excretion rate in men. We conclude that an elevated plasma sialic concentration is strongly related to the presence of microvascular complications in type 1 diabetes, especially retinopathy and nephropathy. Further study of acute-phase response markers and mediators as indicators or predictors of diabetic microvascular complications is therefore justified.

Highlights

  • To test the hypothesis that an increased plasma concentration of sialic acid, a marker of the acute-phase response, is related to the presence of diabetic micro- and macrovascular complications in type 1 diabetes

  • RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS — We investigated the relationship between plasma sialic acid concentration and nephropathy, retinopathy, neuropathy, and coronary heart disease (CHD) in a cross-sectional survey of 1,369 people with type 1 diabetes

  • Sialic acid was significantly associated with diabetes duration

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Summary

STUDY GROUP

OBJECTIVE — To test the hypothesis that an increased plasma concentration of sialic acid, a marker of the acute-phase response, is related to the presence of diabetic micro- and macrovascular complications in type 1 diabetes. In type 2 diabetes, the circulating sialic acid concentration is elevated in comparison with nondiabetic subjects [3], especially in those with the metabolic syndrome [4] This has led to the hypothesis that a cytokine-induced acute-phase response is an integral part of the pathophysiology of this type of diabetes [4,5]. In studies of relatively small numbers of type 1 diabetic subjects, circulating sialic acid concentrations have been found to increase progressively with the presence of microalbuminuria and clinical (dip-stick positive) proteinuria [6,7]. We test the hypothesis that an increased plasma sialic acid concentration is associated with an increased prevalence of microand/or macrovascular disease in type 1 diabetic subjects, using the participants of the EURODIAB study of type 1 diabetes and its complications, a clinicalbased survey performed in 16 European countries

Crook and Associates
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
Present P value for difference
Absent Present
Total cholesterol
Findings
CHD BMI Total cholesterol
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