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Insulin Resistance Syndrome

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Title: Insulin Resistance Syndrome


1
Insulin Resistance Syndrome
  • Chou Chien-Wen MD.
  • Endocrinology Metabolism Division
  • Chi-Mei Medical Center
  • 9 July 2004

2
ACE position statement
  • Clinical manifestations include CVD,
    hypertension, PCOS, and nonalcoholic
    steatohepatitis NASH, and the list continues to
    expand.
  • (AACE) championed the creation of the new ICD-9
    Code 277.7 for the Dysmetabolic Syndrome
  • use the term Insulin Resistance Syndrome to
    describe the consequences of insulin resistance
    and compensatory hyperinsulinemia
  • absence of a straightforward diagnostic test or
    definitive clinical trials, identification and
    treatment of a syndrome

3
Differentiation between the IRS and T2 diabetes
4
Disease-related consequences of IRS/compensatory
hyperinsulinemia
5
Identification of individuals at risk for IRS
6
Obesity and IRS
  • Obesity is a physiological variable that
    decreases insulin-mediated glucose disposal
  • BMI rather than abdominal circumference, be used
    to identify individuals at increased risk
  • Abdominal circumference are neither routinely
    performed nor is its quantification as well
    standardized
  • European Group for the Study of IR was not
    increased when abdominal circumference replaced
    BMI as the marker of obesity
  • BMI and abdominal circumference were closely
    related r0.9 in 15,271 participants in NHANES
    III

7
Criteria for predicting IRS
8
(No Transcript)
9
Plasma insulin concentration and the IRS
  • Plasma insulin concentrations are useful
    surrogate marker of IR
  • Highly statistically significant correlations
    between measures of insulin-mediated glucose
    disposal and both fasting (r0.6) and
    post-glucose challenge (r0.8) plasma insulin
    concentrations
  • Methods to quantify plasma insulin concentrations
    are not standardized
  • Difficult to compare values measured in different
    clinical laboratories
  • Has not been established that an increase in
    plasma insulin concentration, by itself, in the
    absence of any of changes listed in Table 3, can
    predict the development of CVD
  • A research, not a clinical tool

10
Evaluation of the criteria (1)
11
Evaluation of the criteria (2)
12
Evaluation of the criteria (3)
13
The 1st World Congress on the Insulin Resistance
Syndrome
  • was held in Los Angeles, 21-22 November 2003.

Diabetes care Volume 27(2)  February 2004 pp
602-609
14
IRS (1)
  • included insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia,
    dyslipidemia, hypertension, and increased risk of
    both diabetes and coronary heart disease.
  • Other abnormalities associated with the IRS
    include glucose intolerance, small LDL particle
    size, postprandial accumulation of
    triglyceride-rich remnant lipoproteins,
    hypertriglyceridemia, and low HDL cholesterol.
  • endothelial dysfunction increased circulating
    cell adhesion molecules, increased asymmetric
    dimethyl arginine (ADMA), an endogenous inhibitor
    of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS),
    decreased endothelium-dependent vasodilation
  • increased plasminogen activator inhibitor-1,
    fibrinogen, and inflammatory markers, including
    C-reactive protein (CRP) and leukocyte count.

15
IRS (2)
  • The IRS is associated with decreased renal urate
    clearance, increased sympathetic nervous system
    activity and renal Na retention, increased
    ovarian testosterone secretion, and
    sleep-disordered breathing
  • Associated illnesses include cardiovascular
    disease (CVD), type 2 diabetes, hypertension, the
    polycystic ovarian syndrome, nonalcoholic fatty
    liver disease (NAFLD) , malignancies including
    breast cancer, and sleep apnea.

16
Factors that increase the likelihood of IRS
  • include having CVD
  • Hypertension
  • polycystic ovarian syndrome
  • acanthosis nigricans
  • a family history of type 2 diabetes,
    hypertension, or CVD
  • a history of gestational diabetes or glucose
    intolerance
  • non-Caucasian ethnicity
  • sedentary lifestyle
  • obesity

17
Table of content
  • Determinants of insulin sensitivity
  • Mechanisms of insulin resistance
  • Endothelial dysfunction and insulin resistance
  • Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
  • Lifestyle approaches for the IRS
  • Low-carbohydrate diet for atherogenic
    dyslipidemia
  • Relationship between obesity and the IRS
  • Adipocyte hormones and insulin action
  • Inflammation and the IRS

18
Determinants of insulin sensitivity (1)
  • Reaven suggested that adiposity and physical
    fitness each account for 25 of the variability
    in insulin sensitivity
  • with genetic factors, responsible for an
    additional 50 of this variation

19
Determinants of insulin sensitivity (2)
  • Surrogate measures of insulin sensitivity (based
    on comparison with the SSPG) include fasting
    insulin or homeostasis model
  • Glucose tolerance per se (IFG) has sensitivity
    0.10 and specificity 0.97, impaired glucose
    tolerance (IGT) 0.26 and 0.95, fasting insulin in
    the highest tertile 0.66 and 0.83, and insulin 2
    h after oral glucose 0.71 and 0.86, respectively
  • Overweight is another strong predictor.
  • Reaven suggested that triglyceride gt130 mg/dl,
    triglyceride-to-HDL ratio gt3, and insulin gt15
    µU/ml are considerably stronger markers of
    insulin resistance

20
Determinants of insulin sensitivity (3)
  • In a group of 208 persons without diabetes who
    underwent SSPG measurement, measuring waist
    circumference with a tape measure held
    horizontally at the superior iliac crest while
    standing, the BMI and waist circumference showed
    identical correlation to SSPG with R 0.6 for
    both measures.
  • Using a BMI cutoff of 25 kg/m2, 60 had insulin
    resistance, whereas with waist gt88 cm in women or
    102 cm in men, 68 had insulin resistance

21
Mechanisms of insulin resistance (1)
  • Carbon NMR studies with a profound defect in
    muscle glycogen synthesis in persons with type 2
    diabetes
  • Phosphorus NMR studies suggest transport defects
    at the level of hexokinase or GLUT4 to be primary
  • offspring of persons with type 2 diabetes suggest
    this abnormality to precede the onset of the
    disease
  • Further 13C NMR spectroscopy has suggested that
    the defect is at the level of GLUT4.
  • The abnormality in GLUT4 is strongly predicted by
    the free fatty acid (FFA) level and, even more
    strongly, by intramyocellular triglyceride
    levels.

22
Mechanisms of insulin resistance (2)
  • A potential mechanism by which fatty acid
    metabolites inhibit glucose transport activity
    appears to involve the insulin signaling cascade,
    with decreased phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
    caused by activation of a serine kinase cascade
    via protein kinase C-theta decreasing the
    translocation of GLUT4 to the cell membrane.
  • peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor
    gamma agonists act by increasing adipose tissue
    fat stores and preventing the increase in fatty
    acid metabolites in liver and muscle.

23
Endothelial dysfunction and insulin resistance
  • Exercise increases eNOS, improving vasodilation,
    whereas obesity and insulin resistance are
    associated with deficiency of NO leading to
    endothelial dysfunction
  • Insulin resistance is associated with elevations
    in circulating ADMA.
  • ADMA acts as a competitive inhibitor of eNOS, and
    the enzyme dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase
    (DDAH) increases ADMA metabolism, with insulin
    resistance decreasing DDAH levels and activity by
    increasing oxidative stress
  • TZDs, metformin, ACEI, ARB, statins, and
    antioxidants all have been shown to decrease
    plasma ADMA levels, to improving vessel wall NO
    synthesis and decreasing superoxide anion levels.

24
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (1)
  • NAFLD and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH),
    which he described as "the hepatic manifestation
    of the IRS"
  • Approximately 40 of persons with NASH have
    diabetes, and an additional 20 have impaired
    glucose tolerance
  • whereas 50 of persons with diabetes have NAFLD,
    of whom 20 have NASH, with perhaps 20 of these
    persons ultimately developing cirrhosis.

25
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (2)
  • Pathologically, in fatty liver, replacement of
    the hepatocyte by small or large fat globules.
  • Steatohepatitis includes evidence of cytologic
    ballooning and pericellular fibrosis.
  • pathogenesis is that increased fatty acid
    delivery to the liver, in a setting of increased
    fatty acid oxidation causing oxidative injury and
    de novo triglyceride synthesis, causes the
    development of fatty liver, which is associated
    with mitochondrial paracrystalline inclusions
  • both mitochondrial and peroxisomal fatty acid
    oxidation cause an increase in reactive oxygen
    species (ROS), one consequence of which is
    depletion of mitochondrial DNA

26
Lifestyle approaches for the IRS (1)
  • body weight has increased 15 over the past
    century, with BMI gt25 and 30 kg/m2 in 46 and 14,
    respectively, of the population in 1980 and 65
    and 31 in 2000.
  • One of the major approaches to management of the
    IRS is lifestyle change, with 7 weight loss and
    150 min/week exercise in the Diabetes Prevention
    Program reducing diabetes by 58.
  • Realistic goals are a 5-10 weight loss

27
Lifestyle approaches for the IRS (2)
  • Keeping a food diary, typical patients
    underreport calories by one-third and over-report
    exercise by one-half.
  • structure eating and exercise patterns (for
    example, putting out exercise clothes before
    going to bed).
  • small changes is the "100/100" plan eliminating
    100 cal by diet and increasing activity by 100
    cal, which should lead to a 20-lb annual weight
    loss.
  • participate longer in treatment, and increase
    physical activity to at least 1 h/day are most
    likely to succeed.
  • Strength training is as good as aerobic exercise
  • Multiple short periods of exercise may be as good
    as one continuous bout of exercise

28
Lifestyle approaches for the IRS (3)
  • Pharmacotherapy, very-low-calorie diet,
    residential diets, and "meal replacements" allow
    structured eating and are effective in producing
    sustained weight loss
  • Sibutramine Trial on Obesity Reduction and
    Maintenance
  • XENical in the prevention of Diabetes in Obese
    Subjects (XENDOS) study with orlistat, with
    4-year data showing new diabetes in persons with
    IGT decreased 37.
  • BMI exceeds 40 kg/m2, bariatric surgery should be
    strongly considered.

29
Low-carbohydrate diet for atherogenic
dyslipidemia
  • either weight loss or carbohydrate restriction
    can be effective in improving the atherogenic
    lipid phenotype

30
Relationship between obesity and the IRS (1)
  • almost 5 of the population has BMI gt40 kg/m2.
  • Insulin resistance is linearly associated with
    the BMI, although with wide scatter at any given
    level, so that 25-30 of the variance in insulin
    sensitivity is explained by BMI.
  • In a study of 50 obese persons, 29 insulin
    resistant with mean SSPG 232 mg/dl and 21 insulin
    sensitive with mean SSPG 84 mg/dl, with similar
    age and BMI, the 2-h glucose was 144 vs. 112,
    triglyceride 199 vs. 125, and HDL 42 vs. 54
    mg/dl, with a triglyceride-to-HDL ratio 5.4 vs.
    2.5, suggesting that insulin resistance
    contributes to CVD risk independent of obesity.

31
Relationship between obesity and the IRS (2)
  • Using the Stamford database of 500 persons whose
    SSPG had been measured, its correlation
    coefficients were 0.33 for fasting glucose, 0.56
    for insulin, 0.42 for triglyceride, and 0.41 for
    the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio.
  • The best cut point for the triglyceride-to-HDL
    ratio was 3.0, with sensitivity 72 and
    specificity 63 for insulin resistance
  • the optimal triglyceride cut point of 131 mg/dl
    showed similar sensitivity and specificity.
  • The ATP III criteria had sensitivity 55 and
    specificity 85.

32
Adipocyte hormones and insulin action
  • the role of adipocyte hormones in regulating
    insulin action, lipid metabolism, and energy
    homeostasis.
  • Adipocytes produce many cytokines, including
    leptin, with effects on food intake
  • leptin deficiency in humans in association with
    severe hyperphagia, suggesting lack of satiety
    response.
  • Partial leptin deficiency is also associated with
    increased body fat
  • insulin increases leptin production
  • Adiponectin is produced by adipocytes, but levels
    are inversely proportional to total adipocyte
    mass and therefore are lower in obesity.

33
Inflammation and the IRS (1)
  • The initiating steps of atherosclerosis may
    involve inflammation due to lipoproteins,
    phospholipids, and other substances modified by
    oxidation or glycation, with subsequent
    expression by endothelial cells of
    chemoattractant molecules leading monocyte uptake
    into the arterial wall and activation into
    macrophages, which in turn produce
    proinflammatory molecules including TNF-alpha
    and interleukin (IL)-6.
  • IL-6 acts as a messenger cytokine in the liver,
    leading to CRP and serum amyloid A production,
    further mediating atherosclerotic processes.
  • CRP activates complement, stimulates cytokine
    secretion, increases endothelial cell adhesion
    molecule expression, decreases eNOS expression
    and bioactivity, increases plasminogen activator
    inhibitor-1 levels and activity, increases LDL
    uptake by macrophages, increases monocyte
    chemoattraction, increases expression of the
    angiotensin II type 1 receptor, and has many
    additional inflammatory effects.
  • CRP is strongly associated with obesity

34
Inflammation and the IRS (2)
  • levels should be measured twice, 2 weeks apart,
    to avoid effects of intercurrent illness,
    particularly if baseline levels exceed 10 mg/l.
  • CRP elevation predicts future events in studies
    of both high- and low-risk populations
  • Low-risk levels are lt1 mg/l, average-risk levels
    are 1-3 mg/l, and high-risk levels are gt3 mg/l
    and are associated with the doubling of CVD risk.
  • CRP levels increase with age, are higher in
    women, and are associated with coronary disease
    and type 2 diabetes.
  • Modifiable causes of CRP elevation include
    obesity, cigarette use, estrogen treatment, and
    chronic bronchial or periodontal inflammation.
  • CRP decreases during treatment with statins,
    fibrates, antibiotics, metformin, and TZDs and
    with alcohol ingestion

35
Definitions of the Insulin Resistance Syndrome
  • The Adult Treatment Panel III
  • WHO Clinical Criteria
  • AACE Clinical Criteria
  • EGIR

Diabetes Care Volume 27(3) March 2004 pp 824-830
36
TABLE 1. ATP III Clinical Identification of the
Metabolic Syndrome
37
TABLE 2. WHO Clinical Criteria for Metabolic
Syndrome
38
Risk Factor Components
Cutpoints for Abnormality
TABLE 3. AACE Clinical Criteria for Diagnosis of
the Insulin Resistance Syndrome
39
Table of content
  • IRS and CVD
  • IRS and HT
  • IRS and PCOSIRS in childhood
  • IRS and malignancy

40
The Adult Treatment Panel III metabolic syndrome
(1)
  • propose a new definition of the metabolic
    syndrome
  • heightening awareness of the insulin resistance
    syndrome (IRS)
  • not recommend routine measurement of insulin
    sensitivity or of inflammatory markers
  • The 2-h glucose was not included
  • Not calling the metabolic syndrome a CHD
    equivalent
  • Accentuate the risk accompanying elevated LDL
    cholesterol
  • Reverse its root causes of obesity and physical
    inactivity
  • likely to be present in younger persons with CHD

41
The Adult Treatment Panel III metabolic syndrome
(2)
  • metabolic syndrome is present in 10 of
    children.
  • 52 of persons with but 23 of those without
    metabolic syndrome have increased carotid
    intima-media thickness (IMT)
  • association of C-reactive protein with
    atherosclerotic risk
  • Usefulness of measurement of ankle brachial
    systolic pressure ratio

42
The American Association of Clinical
Endocrinologists IRS (1)
  • Differences from the ATP III included focus on
    the IRS rather than on CVD, a decision to
    specifically exclude persons with type 2
    diabetes, and recognition of the limitations of
    the fasting glucose and the usefulness of the 2-h
    postchallenge glucose in assessing insulin
    resistance.
  • the IRS was felt to be a continuum of risk based
    on the number and severity of components.
  • early recognition of the IRS
  • Close follow-up

43
AACE IRS (2)
  • Obesity, based on either BMI or waist
    circumference, was seen as a risk factor rather
    than a criterion for the syndrome
  • Measures of obesity must be ethnically based, and
    one must recognize that in certain Asian
    populations, both BMI and waist circumference
    criteria must be reduced by 15-20.

44
The IRS and CVD
  • In 1,209 Finnish men aged 42-60 years, the
    10-year CVD risk was increased 2.1- and 2.5-fold
    with the ATP III and WHO IRS definitions,
    respectively
  • In the Botnia study, there was a 1.8-fold
    increase in risk in persons satisfying the WHO
    IRS criteria
  • Using the Hoorn Study data
  • among men, high insulin predicted a 1.5-fold
    increase in CVD, increased waist circumference
    predicted a doubling, and hypertension predicted
    a two- to threefold increase in risk.
  • Among women, high insulin and waist circumference
    predicted risk of nonfatal but not fatal CVD, and
    both low HDL and high triglyceride were
    significant factors predicting both total and
    fatal CVD.

45
The IRS and hypertension
  • comparing persons with normal and increased blood
    pressure, with 50 of the hypertensive patients
    but 10 of those with normal blood pressure
    having evidence of hyperinsulinemia.
  • Insulin does cause sodium retention

46
Association between the IRS and the PCOS (1)
  • PCOS may be the most common endocrinopathy among
    young women and is a syndrome of chronic
    anovulation and hyperandrogenism that affects
    6-10 of women of childbearing age and accounts
    for 50-60 of female infertility due to
    anovulation.
  • metformin monotherapy improved the ovulation rate
    3.9-fold over placebo and the combination of
    metformin and clomiphene improved both the
    ovulation and pregnancy rates 4.4-fold compared
    with clomiphene alone.
  • PCOS is associated with a 30-50 rate of early
    pregnancy loss and that hyperinsulinemia is also
    a risk factor for miscarriage.

47
Association between the IRS and the PCOS (2)
  • Women with PCOS have 30 and 10 prevalence of
    impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes,
    respectively
  • Nurses' Health Study (NHS) of 101,073 women
    followed for 8 years, oligomenorrheic women had a
    twofold higher rate of conversion to type 2
    diabetes.
  • Conversely, 25-28 of women with type 2 diabetes
    have evidence of PCOS, and 80 of women with type
    2 diabetes may have polycystic ovaries
  • in the NHS, women with irregular menses had a
    doubled risk of fatal myocardial infarction

48
The IRS in childhood
  • Type 2 diabetes is increasing in children
  • Abnormal glucose tolerance is frequently seen
    among obese children, although it is noteworthy
    that fasting glucose is rarely abnormal
  • significant correlation between parents and
    children in both weight and insulin sensitivity
  • Using the ATP III criteria, the prevalence of
    metabolic syndrome was 2, 4, and 8 at ages 13,
    15, and 19, respectively.

49
  • Figure 1. Effect of Insulin Resistance on the
    Prevalence of the Metabolic Syndrome in White
    Subjects (Panel A), Hispanic Subjects (Panel B),
    and Black Subjects (Panel C), According to the
    Degree of Obesity.

50
  • Figure 2. C-Reactive Protein and Adiponectin
    Levels According to the Degree of Obesity and the
    Insulin-Resistance Category.

51
The IRS and malignancy
  • link between insulin resistance,
    hyperinsulinemia, and cancer.
  • association of breast cancer with
    hyperinsulinemia and diabetes.

52
Lifestyle and insulin resistance in cancer
  • lifestyle factors, such as obesity, caloric
    intake, and physical activity, that may affect
    insulin resistance in cancer.
  • Women's Health Initiative regarding the effects
    of energy intake and physical activity,
    suggesting that both physical activity and less
    food intake can reduce hyperinsulinemia.

53
Breast cancer
  • a relationship between insulin resistance and
    breast cancer.
  • Meta-analysis has shown a 1.56-fold increase in
    breast cancer associated with obesity
  • Insulin resistance is also associated with worse
    breast cancer prognosis, with overweight women
    having a 1.8- to 1.9-fold increased rate of
    recurrence and a 1.4- to 1.6-fold increased
    mortality
  • a study of 535 women with early-stage breast
    cancer, 15 of whom were obese, in which BMI was
    an important adverse prognostic factor for
    distant recurrence and death, with insulin levels
    also predictive of death and distant recurrence
    in both overweight and normal-weight women

54
Colorectal cancer
  • an inverse association between physical activity
    and colon cancer, with a 30-50 risk reduction
    related to high activity.
  • an association between BMI and colon cancer, with
    a 1.3- to 2-fold increased risk associated with
    BMI gt30 kg/m2
  • type 2 diabetes is associated with a 1.5-fold
    increased risk of colon cancer.
  • The risk of colon cancer is greatest in persons
    with type 2 diabetes at 11-15 years after
    diagnosis, suggesting a role of longstanding
    hyperinsulinemia
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