Hyperinsulinemic Microalbuminuria
- 1 February 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 91 (3), 831-837
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.91.3.831
Abstract
Background Both hyperinsulinemia and microalbuminuria have been shown to increase coronary heart disease (CHD) risk, but the interaction among hyperinsulinemia, microalbuminuria, and the risk for CHD has not been investigated in previous studies. Methods and Results The risk of CHD in relation to hyperinsulinemia and microalbuminuria was examined in a cohort of 1069 elderly nondiabetic subjects from Kuopio, east Finland, during 3.5 years of follow-up. The overall incidence of CHD death was 2.8%, and 6.9% of study subjects died of CHD or had a nonfatal myocardial infarction (later referred to as all CHD events). In the highest fasting-insulin quintile (fasting insulin ≥114.0 pmol/L), there was a slightly but insignificantly higher incidence rate of both CHD mortality and all CHD events compared with lower quintiles. The incidence rates of CHD mortality and all CHD events were significantly higher in the highest urinary albumin/creatinine ratio (ACR) quintile (ACR ≥3.22 mg/mmol) compared with lower quintiles ( P <.05 and P <.01, respectively). Hyperinsulinemic microalbuminuria (simultaneous presence of fasting insulin ≥114.0 pmol/L and ACR ≥3.22 mg/mmol) markedly increased the risk of CHD mortality (12.5%, P <.001) and all CHD events (18.8%, P <.001) compared with normoinsulinemic subjects without microalbuminuria (2.2% and 5.8%, respectively). In univariate logistic regression analyses, hyperinsulinemic microalbuminuria was a strong predictor of both CHD death (odds ratio [OR], 5.93; P <.001) and all CHD events (OR, 3.39; P =.002). Multivariate logistic regression analyses were also performed, including sex, current smoking, waist-hip ratio, systolic blood pressure, and HDL cholesterol, with insulin, ACR, or both as independent variables. Even after adjustment for these variables, hyperinsulinemic microalbuminuria remained a strong predictor of CHD death (OR, 7.91; P <.001) and all CHD events (OR, 2.95; P =.014). The group with hyperinsulinemic microalbuminuria was characterized by the most adversely affected risk factor pattern (high triglycerides ≥2.3 mmol/L, low HDL cholesterol ≤0.9 mmol/L in men and ≤1.20 mmol/L in women, and hypertension). Conclusions Simultaneous occurrence of hyperinsulinemia and microalbuminuria identifies a group of subjects with a highly increased risk for CHD in elderly nondiabetic subjects.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Screening for Microalbuminuria: A comparison of single sample methods of collection and techniques of albumin analysisDiabetes Care, 1992
- Microalbuminuria: Implications for micro- and macrovascular diseaseDiabetes Care, 1992
- Asymptomatic hyperglycemia and cardiovascular risk factors in the elderlyAtherosclerosis, 1991
- Insulin and Atheroma: 20-Yr PerspectiveDiabetes Care, 1990
- Screening for Early Diabetic Nephropathy: Which Sample to Detect Microalbuminuria?Diabetic Medicine, 1985
- Hyperinsulinemia. A link between hypertension obesity and glucose intolerance.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1985
- Plasma Insulin as Coronary Heart Disease Risk Factor: Relationship to other Risk Factors and Predictive Value during 9½‐year Follow‐up of the Helsinki Policemen Study PopulationActa Medica Scandinavica, 1985
- Microalbuminuria Predicts Clinical Proteinuria and Early Mortality in Maturity-Onset DiabetesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- MICROALBUMINURIA AS A PREDICTOR OF CLINICAL NEPHROPATHY IN INSULIN-DEPENDENT DIABETES MELLITUSThe Lancet, 1982
- INCREASED URINARY ALBUMIN-EXCRETION RATE IN BENIGN ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSIONThe Lancet, 1974