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A screening procedure detecting high-yield candidates for OGTT. The Women's Health in the Lund Area (WHILA) study: a population based study of middle-aged Swedish women

Lidfeldt, Jonas LU ; Nerbrand, Christina LU ; Samsioe, Göran LU ; Scherstén, Bengt LU and Agardh, Carl-David LU (2001) In European Journal of Epidemiology 17(10). p.943-951
Abstract
The objective was to evaluate a screening procedure for detecting high-yield candidates for an OGTT, in a population of middle-aged Swedish women. A two-step screening procedure was performed in 6917 subjects. Women with a positive screening outcome, i.e. increased non-fasting capillary blood glucose, serum triglycerides, BMI, WHR, blood pressure or a family history of diabetes, pharmacological treatment of hypertension or hyperlipidaemia at the primary screening underwent a 75-g OGTT. A control group of women with negative screening outcome (n = 221) also underwent an OGTT. In 2923 women with positive screening outcome, 517 (17.7%) had NFG/IGT (normal fasting venous blood glucose <5.6 mmol/l and 2h-glucose 6.7-9.9 mmol/l), 109 (3.7%)... (More)
The objective was to evaluate a screening procedure for detecting high-yield candidates for an OGTT, in a population of middle-aged Swedish women. A two-step screening procedure was performed in 6917 subjects. Women with a positive screening outcome, i.e. increased non-fasting capillary blood glucose, serum triglycerides, BMI, WHR, blood pressure or a family history of diabetes, pharmacological treatment of hypertension or hyperlipidaemia at the primary screening underwent a 75-g OGTT. A control group of women with negative screening outcome (n = 221) also underwent an OGTT. In 2923 women with positive screening outcome, 517 (17.7%) had NFG/IGT (normal fasting venous blood glucose <5.6 mmol/l and 2h-glucose 6.7-9.9 mmol/l), 109 (3.7%) IFG/IGT (fasting 5.6-6.0 and 2h 6.7-9.9 mmol/l) and 223 (7.6%) diabetes (fasting > or = 6.1 or 2h > or = 10.0 mmol/l). These figures were three, five and four times higher, respectively, than in the control group with negative screening outcome (p < 0.001 for all); no differences were found for IFG/NGT (fasting 5.6-6.0 and normal 2h < 6.7 mmol/l) (4.6% vs. 7.2%). For predicting impaired glucose metabolism (IFG/NGT, NFG/IGT, IFG/IGT, diabetes), the screening instrument showed an estimated sensitivity of 70%, specificity of 55%, positive predictive value of 34% and negative predictive value of 85%, based on findings in the control sample. The odds ratio for NFG/IGT increased with the numbers of risk factors from 2.8 to 7.7, for IFG/ IGT from 5.7 to 55.0 and for diabetes from 2.5 to 18.1. High B-glucose, WHR and BMI were the three most important factors associated with an increased risk for NFG/IGT, IFG/IGT and diabetes. In subjects with IFG/NGT, none of the screening variables was associated with an increased risk. In summary, the results show a population screening method focused on features of the metabolic syndrome that discloses high-yield candidates for OGTT. A high prevalence of unknown impaired glucose metabolism was found in middle-aged women with a positive screening profile. (Less)
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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
European Journal of Epidemiology
volume
17
issue
10
pages
943 - 951
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • pmid:12188015
  • scopus:0035745071
ISSN
1573-7284
DOI
10.1023/A:1016291426124
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Family Medicine (013241010), Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Lund) (013018000), Unit on Vascular Diabetic Complications (013241510)
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b882fad1-9270-4ba7-b614-0c9b60e49564 (old id 1123153)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:50:44
date last changed
2022-01-26 19:03:36
@article{b882fad1-9270-4ba7-b614-0c9b60e49564,
  abstract     = {{The objective was to evaluate a screening procedure for detecting high-yield candidates for an OGTT, in a population of middle-aged Swedish women. A two-step screening procedure was performed in 6917 subjects. Women with a positive screening outcome, i.e. increased non-fasting capillary blood glucose, serum triglycerides, BMI, WHR, blood pressure or a family history of diabetes, pharmacological treatment of hypertension or hyperlipidaemia at the primary screening underwent a 75-g OGTT. A control group of women with negative screening outcome (n = 221) also underwent an OGTT. In 2923 women with positive screening outcome, 517 (17.7%) had NFG/IGT (normal fasting venous blood glucose &lt;5.6 mmol/l and 2h-glucose 6.7-9.9 mmol/l), 109 (3.7%) IFG/IGT (fasting 5.6-6.0 and 2h 6.7-9.9 mmol/l) and 223 (7.6%) diabetes (fasting &gt; or = 6.1 or 2h &gt; or = 10.0 mmol/l). These figures were three, five and four times higher, respectively, than in the control group with negative screening outcome (p &lt; 0.001 for all); no differences were found for IFG/NGT (fasting 5.6-6.0 and normal 2h &lt; 6.7 mmol/l) (4.6% vs. 7.2%). For predicting impaired glucose metabolism (IFG/NGT, NFG/IGT, IFG/IGT, diabetes), the screening instrument showed an estimated sensitivity of 70%, specificity of 55%, positive predictive value of 34% and negative predictive value of 85%, based on findings in the control sample. The odds ratio for NFG/IGT increased with the numbers of risk factors from 2.8 to 7.7, for IFG/ IGT from 5.7 to 55.0 and for diabetes from 2.5 to 18.1. High B-glucose, WHR and BMI were the three most important factors associated with an increased risk for NFG/IGT, IFG/IGT and diabetes. In subjects with IFG/NGT, none of the screening variables was associated with an increased risk. In summary, the results show a population screening method focused on features of the metabolic syndrome that discloses high-yield candidates for OGTT. A high prevalence of unknown impaired glucose metabolism was found in middle-aged women with a positive screening profile.}},
  author       = {{Lidfeldt, Jonas and Nerbrand, Christina and Samsioe, Göran and Scherstén, Bengt and Agardh, Carl-David}},
  issn         = {{1573-7284}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{10}},
  pages        = {{943--951}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{European Journal of Epidemiology}},
  title        = {{A screening procedure detecting high-yield candidates for OGTT. The Women's Health in the Lund Area (WHILA) study: a population based study of middle-aged Swedish women}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1016291426124}},
  doi          = {{10.1023/A:1016291426124}},
  volume       = {{17}},
  year         = {{2001}},
}