Diabetes Care, Vol 19, Issue 4 333-340, Copyright © 1996 by American Diabetes Association
Factors associated with glucose and insulin levels in healthy postmenopausal women
E Barrett-Connor, HG Schrott, G Greendale, D Kritz-Silverstein, MA Espeland, MP Stern, T Bush and JA Perlman
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0607, USA.
OBJECTIVE: Little is known about the covariates of hyperglycemia and
hyperinsulinemia. We examined candidate factors in postmenopausal women.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We determined the cross-sectional associations
of sociodemographic, body-size, lifestyle, reproductive, and menopausal
factors with pretrial fasting and postchallenge glucose and insulin levels
in 869 postmenopausal women aged 45-65 years. Women were participants in
the Postmenopausal Estrogen/Progestin Interventions study who were not
taking estrogen or insulin. RESULTS: Plasma glucose levels increased
significantly with age; serum insulin levels did not. BMI and waist-to-hip
ratio (WHR) each showed graded positive and independent associations with
glucose and insulin levels. Alcohol intake, cigarette smoking, physical
activity, parity, education, and income were also associated with insulin
or glucose in age-adjusted models. In multivariable models, BMI and WHR
explained 18% of the variability in fasting glucose, 16% in postchallenge
glucose, 28% in fasting insulin, and 17% in postchallenge insulin. Age and
all other factors combined accounted for < 6% of the variance in glucose
or insulin. In multiply adjusted models, African-American and Hispanic
women had higher fasting and 2-h insulin levels than non-Hispanic white
women. CONCLUSIONS: Most of the variance in glycemia and insulin is
unexplained. Measures of obesity and fat distribution account for nearly
all the explained variance.