Longitudinal changes in vitamin D concentrations and the association with type 2 diabetes mellitus: the Tromsø Study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28212Date
2022-12-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Allaoui, Giovanni; Rylander, Charlotta; Fuskevåg, Ole Martin; Averina, Maria; Wilsgaard, Tom; Brustad, Magritt; Jorde, Rolf; Berg, VivianAbstract
Methods This case–control study included 254 participants with blood samples collected at fve diferent time-points (T1–T5) between 1986 and 2016. Of the 254 participants, 116 were diagnosed with T2DM between T3 and T4, and were considered cases; the remaining 138 were controls. Linear mixed regression models were used to examine pre- and post-diagnostic changes in 25(OH)D concentrations, and logistic regression was used to examine associations between these concentrations and T2DM at each time-point.
Results 25(OH)D concentrations at diferent time-points and the longitudinal change in concentrations difered between cases and controls, and by sex. For women, each 5-nmol/l increase in 25(OH)D concentrations was inversely associated with T2DM at T3 (odds-ratio, OR, 0.79), whereas for men, this same increase was positively associated with T2DM at T1 (OR 1.12). Cases experienced a signifcant decrease in pre-diagnostic 25(OH)D concentrations (p value <0.01 for women, p value =0.02 for men) and a signifcant increase in post-diagnostic 25(OH)D concentrations (p value <0.01 for women, p value =0.01 for men). As such, each 1-unit increase in month-specifc z-score change between T1 and T3 was signifcantly inversely associated with T2DM (OR 0.51 for women, OR 0.52 for men), and each such increase between T3 and T5 was signifcantly positively associated with T2DM in women (OR 2.48).
Conclusions 25(OH)D concentrations seem to be afected by disease progression and type 2 diabetes diagnosis.